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Show '! 1 i 4 x i ' . A.;v.. , f j0uBFTES $ mtaV-Eri- a lZl4) are idrwtMy ntm tasus or .ABnTwJ3oiir 14) ' -- H JS tj . : NAVY BEANS KEEPS YOUTH OUT OP THE SERVICE la-- t I.: TACOMA, Wash., Nov. 3. Two na. vy beans kept Arnold Phelps, Kalaiua youth out of the .navy, when he touk n physical examination and was rejected because his hearing' was below par. lie went to n specialist, who found n small white bean of the known ns navy be an, in Week Ending November 4, 1927 each variety etf. - AK INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER 1$ PLENTY, BUSY, RIGHT NOW ' r: it :! nr-roy- ending, with October 22d the production Utah and Washington (combined) is es-j at two thousand tons, a decline of a thousand from the week, . Stevenson's Twenty Years Ago This Present Week . Body Is Found jforge W. ' by the war Sep-fcsb- Mrs. C. W. Townsend and little babe of Castle Gate were visiting at the home of Mrs. W. J. Elwood at Sunny-side. ar ed department grave has been located. At location was nude possible k s letter received by the edi- Sr of the Epworth Herald at (Sago from a 'German, who -- officer German army in the mid war. He was bn the front tbs battle of St Mihiel, and mr r dogout, he eays, they and buried the hods. of , litid American soldier, whoee tp bon the name ..of V George : A on, May hmktion of the letter, a very, kg oat describing the bailie the m belongings taken from the lad American, all written from was forwarded to the jW department at Washington, AC. The German said the Ep-JM- JjMy, tb Herald was the oily ad- . fane he had in America. ' With Ah eta and dental charts fur-fta-d by Dr. H. B. Goetxman itPHn of work he had1 done Ororge Stevenson in 1914 ad 1915, 'in investigation was Carrie A. JThomas of Colton was a Price visitor, coming here-obusiness connected with the sale of some lots at Helper. P. J. (Yankee Bill) Thomas had just about completed the foundation for his concrete building south of the bloek at Priee. Jessie'' Miss Pouts, attending school . at Provo, earns down for the weekend on n visit with' her parents, Mr. and n fait his ma V Dr.E. M. Neher of Castle Gate ifas a business visitor in Price. AfUf the lapse of over nine tin he family of the . late Jmr West Stevenson, killed of St. Mihiel, i tbs battle 13, 1918, has been ' . Mrs. Thomas Fonts, at Price. David Hall from Farnham brought to this office n hubbard squash that and tipped the scales at eighty-fiv- e one-ha- lf pounds when taken from the vine. About a hrndred miners of Kenilworth, mostly Italians, .went on n strike. After being eut for n day they went back to work with everything fixed up. "Work was suspended for the (ime being on the Strawberry irrigation project in the vieinity of Thistle, he government appropriation was about Light Sentence Is Given . Accused Murderer . IS BEING TALKED . . sue-msiu- lly J1 OF. Action on the suggestion of SecreBY ALL MEANS LET UTAH GET tary of State Crockett that a special WHAT IS COMING session of the legislature be called to amend the state corporation tax laws Utahs legislature of two years has not yet been taken up by Gov. ago (1925) passed s measure defining the status. of domestic and foreign George H. Deni, according to his seccorporations and determining the tax retary, William T. Iglehart. The gov- to be paid by each, says W, F. Anernor will examine the merits of the derson of Price, who was n member of suggestion before reaching a decision, that body at the time. VSnch tax wis whieh may be deferred several days. to be determined by the amount of The proposal for an extra session was capital set aside by each corpjratioL broached Saturday to the governor in for its operations in this state. Since a letter in which the secretary of Utah corMrations were paying-- tax state stated his belief that the legis- on their total eaptal this seeired to lature should be summoned to amend be fair as against" foreign concerns. the corporation tax laws in conform- If the United States eourts have coital-ablthis lav unfair ami ity to reeent dccisioilfi of the United the sate legislature should imStates supreme court, and in view of rulings of the Utah supreme court. It mediately emend. The revenue which was the opinion of the secretary of will be lost if action is not taken will state that the eost of assembling the rn unt to many tij.r the eosc of an legislature would be less than the low extra session. The state certainly to the state in failing to receive rev- needs the money. Utah invitee foreign enue from corporation taxes, estimat- capital, but expects it to pay its proed to be about two hundred thousaqd portion of the operating expenses of When seen by Anderson dollars annually from both local and the state. foreignT The secretary based his let- in the presence of Carl R. Mareusen, ter on the aetion of the attorney gen- republican stats chairman, ths Utter eral of Utah in withdrawing his ap- agreed with nil that Representative peal to the supreme court from the Anferson is quoted ns saying. Repredecision of Ahe district court finding sentative W. E. Engle (democrat from for the plaintiff in the esse of the Carbon) eonld not be reached today. -- exhausted. '..With the cloning of the forwarding business of G. T. Olsen at Price Arand a letter from the ' pi ' thur H. Hunten beeame agent for the department of October 13, Raven Mining company to look afte: ' VU, Rads: its shipments here. The quartermaster general ' The bet that yon be informed . honey erop of the Kingdom of t the investigation" into had all been signed up. The Emery the, harvest was six hundred thousand your son, the late Pri-pounds, whieh at six cents the averWest Stevenson, m 121472, Seventy-Nint- h age price paid made the erop worth Com-- W 8ixth Regiment, ; United eighteen thousand dollars. Min Olive Melgren, who had been Marines, has been concluded. The body visiting at the home of her aunt, Mrs. been identified in Grave. Thomas Fitzgerald, in Price departed IS, " ' for her home at Tombstone, Ariz. Her St.'Mihiel Am-ssmetery, Thiaeourt; M. sister, Miss Lillian, had been employ, and in accordance .with ed to tench sehool at Woodside. request will be permanent-faterre- d , The republicans had the only tickin Europe. et at Price for the November election. A. W Horsley for president of tha fts St Mihiel cemetery is town board, J. M. Whitmore, J. those in Europe to be ?. Ermstns Anderson and Hyrum d by this government Frandsen, trustees. Levi B. Psee later grave will be marked with was made clerk, whieh was appoint- Minneapolis Steel and Machinery comje marble headstone, e ive. pany and other foreign corporations name, rank, John Holly, former manager of the against tha state. date of The companies sued to recover Mier and the state Wasatch store over st Sunnyside, was 1lZ taxes paid under protest in 1926 and ffwwhheeame. Thin will eaught in a bank failure at Goldfield, 15th. Without any Nev., and lost some twelve thousand including 1927 np to November special no- busW Of milla.it 08 was according mercantile withdrawn, The in tbs dollars. He was appeal tb f iness in the latter place and was do- to Secretary Crockett, because of the went certainty ' that the supreme court The ing well when the institution department extends to would uphold the district court- and "busted. . sincere sympathy and find the. law unconstitutional. Such Castle from that knowledge of the Several mighty hunters 3 it was said, would leave the and decision, Creek of your son Ivie left Dais Quiehempah, body may without the power to collect corstate immediate points to slaughter big Cl?0?msome measure of of any kind. The detaxes W oods, poration game. District Attorney F. E. Sheryur bereavement. cision of the supreme court was anD. A. Dickson, County Attorney CL?,,11 sssured that the because of its recent finding be iff Oscar Beebe and Henry Wilcox ticipated reverently eared of Carl A. Badger, recase in the south Over Off as this comprised the- quartet. government the J. C. Peni representing it was claimed the deer were making spondent, Delaware n corporation, faees at people that passed that way. ney company, Mif body was found a few and the stats of ths secretary against a the dugout described the whieh in plainstate treasurer, Intermonntaln Lloyds, n pew Inaur-ic- e disSi Sitrmiln both of decisions was tiff given autorao-miand though the tag The company specialising in benches. opintrict and supreme risks, has just eompletM .foand, the dental by Justice Valentine at Salt Lake City. Seth ion, written Sk jr?lied end marine insig-rhthe decision of the affirms conrniM.oner, is Gideon, found os tha collar. states that the Utah n.ion, elate bank and court district of Price, u closed a card giv-- 1 president C. R. Marciwej no alternative but has court vice p enident; R. L Conley secretary supreme of the United .tZ,ewn,ery location of the rulings follow to I L. runt, and treasurer, and George court in its findings, ffrave, whieh it in supreme States you will be v:i e ftresident and general pleased to which were that similar laws in other hold-t.Tnere are some twenty five f lock were in violation of ths federal states ihe concern in Carnoii and IT constitution. uy The Penney company had paid to father ths state under protest 611,250, repre-e htt?0!! Hansen, The children usually regard aged S yean, the required fee of twenty-fivman in some respeots, but senting Xt2V0,o of lua parent in ns a smart wonder n share on nil its authorised cents have why he didn t is week from they often ths value of ths although stock, store. Jgi??' funeral services were sense enough to start n candy holdings in Utah amounted to It home there yester-wt- h Iftv Ths suit was to recover aU 9660,000. Men's gratitude is Bishop Eugene amount paid, save a hundred and the favor. n bast just before you do him "a . a ed e en-th- sixty-fiv- e dollars, whieh was.conceded ' as Sue the state in taxes. t - re-2- eon-Xm- J1 e UJr, . r' . C eom-nen- . 11 a For the seven days f coke for the states of i vA o Discovery pf a skelaton in an new Victor over in Emery county Monday of this week by A. Z. Thompson, a sheepherder, eaused the persual of the files of missing men in both Carbon and Emery counties by 8heriff Jr R. Nelson at CsejJe Dale and Sheriff Bliss of Carbon. The4 skull, whieh was in three parts, had apparently been penetrated by a bul7 let. The skeleton is believed to- - be that of Orville Orundvig of Wellington, who disappeared in 1921 and has not sines been heard from by relatives Grundvig left Price sis years ago, it is stated,, going over to the Victor section, where he had some oil elaims. He had returned to Price from Idaho and spent a short time here, where he worked at the earpentera trade on some buildings he and George A. Ryland were erecting. Several days after completing the last job he left Price for the south to look' over hie properties, lie was never seen by any of his relatives qr friends after leaving here, so far as known. That murder was committed somewhere in the vicinity of the desolate region, if not kt the eznet spot, is not doubted by Sheriff J. R. Nelson of Emery and his assistant, Deputy H. A. Wickman. Bobbery is a theory that is given general eredenee, for no objeet of value was found in. the tattered and torn, garments that littered the ground about the bones. Members of the Grundvig family faceted the remains Wednesday, but eir donbt, born hugely in hope that the strangely missing relative in still alive, persisted and the skeleton frag--, mentg were gathered up over n radius that of October 22d production amounted to 2,062,000 l 1 31-F- , ' i I' SKUim Ton HEM or Oct the week ending with of bituminous in Utah is estimated at tons a gain over the previous week of 5000 Colorado New Mexico 65,000 and Wyoming 187,000. Total output Jy that coked at the mines and lignite the country over, is --uted at 10,283,000 net tons. Ip comparison with the produc--. shows a decrease of 267,000 or 2.5 seven it days the previous of soft produced during the present cal--r eest Total quantity approximately two hundred and fifty r year to October 22d to amounts 246,149,000 net .tons. This for the I days v as a whole. . Ike production of anthracite showed a little change in the ended October 22d. The total output, including washery and ied coal, is estimated pt 1,799,000 net tons as against 1,794,-I- N the preceding seven days. In the week in 1926 correspond-vit- h WASHINGTON, D. C., r 15th the production 1 J nm is sni t Am J , - v- -l S. ys It was . x Mike Fragadakis, who has .been on trial this week charged .with first degree murder in connection wit1 the death of Steve Kapokis and n fellow countryman at Clear Creek on May 22, 1926, pleaded guilty to Voluntary manslaughter on Wednesday last and was sentenced (to from one to ten ' years in the state penitentiory by Judge George Christensen of the Seventh Judicial District court. After two days effort to seleet a jnry in the trial the ease came to a sudden halt when defendant plead guilty. With the first speeial venire of t ft cn-t-y men exhanseted five preemptory challenges remained for etch side and eighteen were called to appear.' Most of these were disqualified for cause. Several voiced their opposition to capital punishment, but the majority was one to the wide acquaintanceship of the defendant and early formation of opinions in the case. More than seventy prospective jurors appeared, in the tmse. Ihe reduction of the eharg) was stipulated by District Attorney F. W. Teller and Attorneys B. W. Dalton nud Henn Ruggeri for the defense and agreed to by Jndge Christensen. Fragadakis has been taken to Salt I ake City to begin serving his term. The slayer was captured in California in June Iasi, more than a year after t lie crime was committed, and was returned to Carbon county to stand triuL' Through n quarrel arising over a card game Fragadakis and Kapnkii hr'ame bitter enemies. They were thrown together constantly during their work and are said to have often quarreled. Their fued reached n crisis last May, when Fragadakis shot and mortally wounded Kapokis. . Iragadakis fled on foot over the mountain trails whieh he knew well and by stopping at w.ou sheep rimps, mansged to make his escape to Ctlifornin. . contended in this aetion that See. 2511, Compiled Laws of UUh (relating to the corporation tax), contravenes the commerce clause of the United States constitution, because "it levies s tax whieh directly lays a burden upon interstate commerce, "and that it also violates the "due process of Uw clause ' because it "attempts to tax property wholly situate and being without the terri- RED CROSS ROLL GALL STARTS torial . jurisdiction of the state of NOVEMBER 11TH Utah. "Five million members for 1928, BIG ARMISTICE DAY CELEBRA- has been adopted ' by the Ameriean Red Cross as its slogan for tha elevTION ARRANGED HERE enth annnal roll call, to be held from The American Legion of Pries is November 11th to Thanksgiving. If planning one of the biggest celebra- Jhis goal is reached it will mean an intions in ths history of the eity. for crease of nearly two. million over last Armistice Day, next Friday, and will enrollment. 1 During the roll be see isted in the, same by the legion yoaip call morf than two hundred and fifty auxiliary. Plans are now nndtr nay. thousand men "and women, wearing Price Chamber of Commerce will have Red Cross' workers' badges, will go charge of the parade and will give a among the people ' inviting them to prize of ten dollars to the fraternal join for 1928.- - All will be volunteer order having the largest number of workers. Dues collected will finance members of their order in tha parade local r work, . such . as pnblie health, on that day. This event will ssseinlk1 nursing end service to the world war si American Legion Hall and around veterans and supply funds for tha a(ioxen organizations have promised international and national Bed Cross to take part. Angus E. Johnson will program. Price and Carbon county have dbargo of the linen,! will play its put in enlisting members. ; H, S. Robinett, chairman of the If a bride isnt homesick for her local 'chapter, is now mapping plans family six weeks after marriage its for the annual drive whieh starts next n sign she got the right man. Friday. - . . . f: : I u 'i 1 u ii - of a hundred feet, transported to Viator and there baried. Actuated by desires to find Orville Grundvig if he is still alive and thus dear up the uncertainty that exists surrounding identification of thin , gruesome find, the sheriff e workers are checking np in the Carbon mining eamps with n faint beliqf thkt the misting man may be located. If ni-- t successful, the official records prb-ablwill ehroniele . the skeleton m that of Orville Orundvig. Six yun ' have erased from the Grundvig family mind the meqpory of what clothing their' vanished member wore when he loft on the exploring expedition, so thnt'they were unable to reaeh n when they saw a pair of blue "denim Overalls and an army eoat. ' Neither could n pair of No. 8 shoes, one of whieh was thirty-fiv-e feet : , away from the main bodily clarify their minds .. j,. X t y. -- .I ' eon-elesi- on . - . framed-work- 'Wednesday a coroner inquest pronounced the nnnamed victim's death as "due to n gunshot wound through the head. TEAR AROUND RECREATIONAL PROGRAM PLANNED A plan under which the Pries ward a year-arourecreational program and at the same time go onto a budget basis has been announced by the bishops offiee. Un der thisplan, it is provided that each family shall pay into a fund ten dol-lar- s, whieh will be used to defray the ' expense of upkeep upon the tabernacle, and also to provide the different auxiliary organisations with funds for carrying on their work. Heretofore the ward and these or- ganizafcions. have had to rely upon volantary contributions and upon entertainments to raise money. Uufyr the new plan n fond of three thousand dollars will be raised, the burden will be more equally distributed and the whole years program of entertain- - mentn will be given free to those who? have paid their dues. Commercial-ta- d will commence nd recreation and the necessity for periodic drives for funds will than be done away with. Benson tickets will . be distributed to eaeh family or person who pays the ten dollars, and the entire lani'l will be admitted under its icket to the seasons festivities. 'The program will include a series of dances, music ales, carnivals, ths Mutual Improvement association annual .drama and ball, a vaudeville show and many others. It it hoped that in this program a fojndation will be laid .for a higher type of eomrannity recreation, un- tainted with eorameraialiaa. If tha Ian is successful, as it has proved to f in other localities, it is the first step toward the building of a motto tional halt T.e committee directly fa i charge of the program rons'sts of In.. R. I. Rrockbank as Mrs. E. O. Anderson, Mrs. J. C. Hubbard, Utah Thompson, Elios Gardner and Florence Ouviron. v ' year-aroum- ' eha-'ima- .. The Paris Candy company fa tha Miilburn building on Main strot at Price has been eloeed by the sheriffs The place belonged to Goat Deaos. 1 ' .. t '9 o |