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Show OH 2, is HE SUN'S RATES. L Bun's diapUj advertising rates are wupomoriMTia cents aa Inch per Issue or is-t-o ! inch by the month four (4) fif-jlocal advertiser. Transient, crnta aa inch per issue. Position er cent additional. JJo dinply ad-- I accepted for the first (front) (25) Page 1 readers twenty-fiv- e , per line aa issue. . . (40) We have arranged the address on jeer Bun so that you ran tell for yourself in when your expiration time cornea, hr that good kind one is not The Sun, Pries, Utah. Volume Hating1 ped o 14, Humber 40 AH INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER Week Ending March 9, 1928 BIG SELECTION TO CHOOSE FROM Jeep and Lambs At Utahs Output Now Lower Figures Way M . me, and Pv the t Her1 er-- rs S; ad to forty under the twenty-fiv-e point of that time.' Trade was etive as coon aa the deeline was Most of the fat lambs sold it $15.00 to $15.35. Shorn pnes an laoted at $12.50 to $13.00; yearlings 1150 to $13.50, and ewes $8.00 to WESTERN HOG MARKET GOOD, SAYS AUTHORITY LOS ANGELES, Manh A- -J. A. fsnghton, who writes a periodical let' iff on The Live Stock Situation, nth releases by an organization nam-t- f itself the United States Service veau, ia decidedly "bullish" on ogt with particular nfennee to the beifie-Coi- uft market. . His remark to of interest in the intermountain Wintry, which enjoys advantages aim- - RADIO COOKING 8HM999I N. Y March lr SCHENECTADY,' Engineers in tha General Elec- - 4 f trie laboratories have deri a high frequency vacuum tube . that per forms such a maxing and unrelated testa aa cooking by radio and raining blood temperature in humans. An yet Dr. W. li. Whitney, lx bo rate nr director, uid today, no usera hire been found for the tube. It Is considered ao dangerous that per-- I sous working on it .remain ezpoeed 4 J tei longer than fifteen minutes. Katanear it show great anima- 4 J brought thin for g abort time and then die. 4 2 Engineers demonstrated certain of 7 tks tube's effects today. It will light 4 2 n incandescent bulb, fresh from 2 curton, without wire connection. A 2 mid copper bar quickly heata so ? that it hasps the hand. To cook Sy .4 2 todio g wire was suspended over a 2 table at a distance of fifteen feet 4 4 4 4 4 ? 2 in the tube's radialing aerial. hen sausages and eggs were sue- Pended from the wire in glass tubes 2 : they speedily fried. Water was boil-- i?d and cookies baked by the brat transmitted through since. Although the experimenters have tot studied the tube's uses careful- !Jy. Ir. Whitney hope that it may to used artifical to heat tha blood W the sdek. ! Keren an being Induced in ffal ailments now notably paresis. 1 4 4 4 4 k - I- - . ' hs Total-productio- Price Petroleum Near the Salt Wash BIG MEN COME ilar to those he deecribea. He quotes Is census figures to show that the present supply of swine on the- farms of the United States has frequently been exceeded in the past thirteen years, . Several officers and stockholders of lecent heavy marketing he attributes Hie Price Petroleum company from to the strong eom market, and he be- Eureka were visitors in this city this lieves that a resultant eurtaihneut of week and last Saturday. In the party snpplies this next fall and winter will were Ed Boftnerj president ; Frank iring better prices. There jo re, he de- Garrity, viee; George Houle, assistant duces, the swine producer who is not secretary, and Claude F. Baker, atan "in and outer will benefit during torney. Also L. D. Worden and Thomthe next few months by having sta, as Maxwell, luge stockholders. Their consistently with his prodnetion. trip was to see whats doing, as it were. They found the well down to a eerpts from his latest letter; . hundred and eighty-Then has been a consistent cam- depth of twenty-si- x five feet. The' formation at this carried on West the paign throughout in the past few years to encourage point is the Morrison and close to or production. The need is apparent, as at the top of the salt wadi sands. The in order to meet the requirements of hole ia in moat excellent shape aith the water shut off. . This ia being takthe rapidly increasing Western en out to drill ahead with excellent Pademand, particularly on the cific Coast, it ia necessary to reach as shr wings of live oil and gas more and far back aa the Missouri river mar- more apparent as the wai?r pressure kets to secure supplies. The Coast s taken off. Driller Ed Walsh and the Imre prices of hogs have, outside of occa- the officials inspected and are more" than p'caicd with sional fluctuations, maintained a substantial differential over the Missouri conditions. Visitors are welcomed and river markets, this spread represent- every pains is tav.en to V.:nw everyand explanaPong gone into for ing the shipping expense, shrink, lose thing This well is now at its thenninitiated. disto incident and other items long tance hog shipping, and in favor of most interesting an ? promising phase, obthe Western producer. This advan- and with present showings bitand the next the ihe sinds facing tage will be maintained until produc- jective tion meets demand, and this does not few weeks should be of great interest to all who have the welfare of Price at appear at all likely for many years, heart The visitors returned home last as increases have scarcely maintained the present ratio of supply to de- Sunday. mand, due to increases in population HE PLEADS GUILTY on the Coast. "The producer wW raises hogs year STANDARD VILLE, March 3.- -J. in and year out, not making thgm his G. Hanson of this place and a miner, main line of production, but carrying was arrested on Wednesday, charged watch. He offerenough to follow hi eattle or to sal- with the theft of a e ed a plea of guilty to pettit larceny vage the many waste items which a.-on every farm and dairy which can e before Justice W. D. Wilson and was turned into pork, has shown good re- sentenced to serve yixty days in the turns right along regardless of market eounty jail at Price. Visit Price and Inspect Holdings Over Near 8unnyside. Henry H. Jones of this city, civil engineer and general superintendent of the Utah Rock Asphalt corporation, had as his guests this week that concerns president, C. N. Power of Chicago; John Cregin of Pueblo, Colo., and Dr. Herbert A. Black, secretary, of the Colorado city. The visit of the gentlemen here wee to go over matters pertaining to the property of the company over near Sunnynide, a full description of which was recently given in The Sun, Production fpom the great beds above the coal camp ia expected on a large-scalby early summer to fulfill numerous contracts for paving in the Centennial and other states east of here, and which have been recently entered into. The visitors returned to their respective homes yesterday, and Jones i went in to Salt Lakt City to look after important matters for his principals. Headquarters and offices are to be at Pries. . con-turn- er Pa-nrd- PLENTY OF SNOW ON COTTONWOOD AND GOOSEBERRY ? - i . 4 : UTAH COAL RUNS HIGH IN ALL STRIKERS PEACE PROPOSAL NOW REJECTED THE MANY BYPRODUCTS Interest in the Movement for processing of Utah coal for elimination of smoke received new impetus yesterday (Thursday) with receipt of a tele, gram by J. M. Orr, general manager of the Utah Coal Producers association at Salt Lake City, from the Consolidated Coal Produets company, Irvington, N. J., reporting that two or three samples were satisfactorily high in byproducts. 'Determination of high qualtiy byproduct content was made when two representative samples were processed at the companys plant at Irvington, according to Orr. The third and last is being gone into now, and should it. yield also a high quality content the Eastern firm will be prepared to fkeaent Zion a propqpal for establishment of a processing plant Mein-tir- e recently conducted a two weeks survey at the capital city for the purpose of determining whether tho location was suitable. The eity was declared as being admirably located for the plant and he has been ranking toots of eoal for determining its worth efore submitting proposals. ht . PRICE YOUTHS ARE SENT TO OGDEN 0 - a, 1 ; BRAFFET COAL LAND APPEAL ON. WASHINGTON, D. C., March 8. The Braffet coal land case, involving title to an immensely valuable quarter section in Twp. 12 South, Range 10 East at Castle Gate in Utah, long pending before the interior department and in the courts, was argued in the United States supreme court today on appeal from the recent de-cision of the court of appeals for Hie District of Columbia. In the local courts the estate of Mark P. Braffet won out, and al was taken by the government The latters case was argu ed by Solicitor General William D. Mitchell, the Braffets resting, on.brief. u W. W. Ray of Salt Lake City, one of the Utah Fuel companys attorneys in the case, heard the Solicitor generals arguments, but made no reply. EPHRAIM, March 7. Burns Cox of Fairview reports to the Manti forest office here that the snow along the mail route bove Milbum has been lighter during the present season than it has been in any winter during t-past thirteen yean. S. H. Ollerton, forest ranger, made , enow measurements on the Cottonwood and Gooseberry watersheds March 2d. The avinches ANOTHER BIG DEAL PENDING erage depth was forty-eigIN CARBON DISTRICT with a water content of fifteen. This is above the average for the past five For a consideration of five dollars years. With the ground full of mois OBerto and John Barber of Heltun the outlook for irrigation water Joe have given an option at $27,200 to per favorable. is not a get fluctuations. Production is Edward D. Dunn of Salt Lake City on The nation could not function for a rich qnick ponposition, but ia a profkind one ia not our big Printing that luge traet of land in the Carbon itable, stable business, and one which week without the products of ashamed of. The inn. Price, Utah. and just west of that town. district mines. it will stand Western producers in dolThe price per sere is eighty-fiv- e hand to foster. lars. The date of the instrument as filIn California alight increases are ed with Connty Recorder Jameson is shown, but there are only about 60 February 28th, last Annual payments are around five thousand dollars with per eent as many on the farms there were ten years ago, and the deferred ones drawing 7 per eent. The state is still in the position of importRaleigh Mathena, aged 16, and Zane THAYN NOW whole may be met by giving a hunHQLD8 OVER WITH The dred and twenty days notiee. ing from 80 to 90 per cent of the hogs Aaay, 14 years, are now in the indusBOARD IRRIGATION and pork products required to. meet trial school at Ogden, being sentenced acreage is described as tho north half demands.1 This offers an opportunity this week by Juvenile Officer John Because of the expense of litigation of the northwest quarter of See. 22, for the producers in the entire section Potter after they, confessed od arrest wherein so of southwest quarlittle was at stake the liti- southeast quarter last ter oLBee. 15, east half of northeast lying west of the Rocky Mountains. by Sheriff Bliss to the burglary WaA. W. Gove D. vs. II. Thayn, quarter, "northwest quarter of southgation of Sunday night of the Consolidated RANGE LANDS ARE SHOWING gon and Machine company la place of which was to have eome up in district east quarter and southeast quarter of SOME IMPROVEMENT business on South First West street eour at Price this week, has been southwest 'quarter of See. 21, and the ' and previously that of the Fanners dropped and the latter now holds over northwest quarter of northwest quar-to-r Where range depletion from over of See. 28, all in Twp. 12 South, Exchange and Implement a short time as a director on the board of the Price grazing has not gone- so far that the ago. The 'boy disclosed their cache River Water Conservation district. II. Range 10 East, Salt Lake meridian. principal forage plants have been and led the officers to it, which was G. Mathis is the next one to go out by practically killed out and the value of on the banks of the Price river in the termination of the time he was elected UNION HEAD SCATHES MINERS the 'soil reduced by erosion the recov- southeastern WAGE BEFORE SENATE ' part of the eity. Close for. In the recent election the mode ery of Western range lands undcr'the to a thousand dollars worth of goods of balloting was by shares of stock at March 8. WASHINGTON, D. proper protection and use is generally were recovered. That is, such .value Guymon and Wellington precincts and his The Glen. indictment individuals at Continuing scorching, than more up Ten rapid, aeeording to specialists of the Spring by it. was plaeed oa guns, forest service of the United States de- a hundred pounds of ammunition, tabulation of the result with thirty-nin- e of tha bituminous coal industry, John votefc east at the latter place gave L Lewis, president of tha United partment of agriculture. The recent watches, knives, cartridge belts, leathof five Mine Workers, today again uttribiiied studies made on the Santa Rita re- er euffs, Jdcycle tires and a complete Thayh an apparent majority howconditions in the coal fields to a conserve down in Southern Arizona have eamping outfit and. the like were tak- hundred. It wae alleged by Gove, of vote Glen thrown considerable new light on the en. Two of the among the railroads to despiracy that' in the the. were pos- ever, Spring guns reto lands miners five more than of e wages. Testifying bepress represented typical range tendency session of thp youths. They had gone thirty-ninhear- fore the sena-- e interstate commerce At a stock. cover 'from misuse if given a chance. on a of thousand shares these with hunting trip Monday The wails and They demonstrate that improvement and some of the ammunition. They ing on a demurrer of Counsel B. W. committee he said: redo the lamentations that rise from the natural the Price held in ean be lro tight about by Dalton for recently had.it and later shot a groundhog vegetation under carefully regulated their breakfasts. The youths admitted eisioh of Judge Dilworth Woolley was women and children of the fields seem much method to have no effect on the leaders who is grazing, and that (his to Sheriff Bliss and deputies working plaeed on record, .namely, that only more practical and economical, than on the case that their downfall was proxies of corporations could be vot- direct ibe policy of the railrotJv artificial 'rehabilitation, which is eost' due to reedjng blood'and thunder ed, and that individual ones must be lie submitted to Chairman Wctenn for conrecord an original copy of Hie ly and uncertain. literature. It had been their inten- thrown out. Supporters of theout of the Jacksonville, Fla., wage agreement beConservative use of the range by tion the claimed that throwing on hold np, they mid, test later to. tween naand operators, saying: miners with live stork don not interfere trains and banks. Watehing the cache individual proxies would. hive given "This is the contract wh-ewas vio Gove a dear majority by the ofCoen led to thoir undoing. (Contint4d On Fags Five) . 1111$ 91994994644 ( WASHINGTON, D. C., March 5. The total quantity of soft produced the country over the present coal year, approximately two hundred and seventy-nin- e working days, amounts to 429,836 0Q0 net tons. That of the week ending with February 25th including lignite and that coked at the mines 10,181,000 net tons. Compared with the output in the preceding seven days this is an increase of 807,000 tons or 8.6 per cent Figures of daily loadings indicate that the average time worked on Washington's birthday was equivalent to about nine-tentof normal. Production during the week of last year corresponding to that of February 25th totaled 12,763,000 tons. For The seven days ending with February 18th Utah is credited with an output of 75,000 tons, Colorado 197,-00- 0, New Mexico 62,000 and Wyoming 123,000. The. weekly rate of beehive coke production continues to. show little change. The total during the seven days ending February 25th is. estimated at 96,000 net tons. The states of Utah and. Washington, combined, had an output of two thousand tons and Colorado and New Mexico the same, a falling off for the two, latter of a thousand. of anthracite during the week ended Febru- -' ary 25th is estimated at 1,254,000 net tons. Compared with that of the preceding week this shows an increase of 229,000 or 22.8 per cent. Production during the same week in 1927 corresponding with that of February 25th amounted to 1,374,000. Bun Special Service. 1 Seventy-Fiv- e The Bub B pedal Service. M inela. Hog prices hen wen dewed five to ten and the decline the market only slightly higher the low point of the season. All p and Iambi . were only slightly er than last weeks close. Receipts ay wen 10,000 cattle, 15,000 hogs d 8000 sheep, compared with 9000 ittle, 13,000 hogs and 800 sheep one k ago and 11,650 cattle,' $11,675 and 6365 sheep a year ago. Prices for fat Steers wen stronger n last week's close and fifteen to irty-fiv- e higher. Receipts continued :ht with quality add condition of the '(cringe rather plain for this season the year. Practically no kmgfed ittle an coming and this beat shown not grade above good. Killers inght close to urgent orders and the ippers in tome eases could not get class they needed. The beat steers medium to etrongweights, sold $13.50 to $14.00, and fair to good 100 to $13.50 and ordinary kinds .50 and up. Texas and Oklahoma 1 and hnllfeds $11.00 to $13.00. s and heifers wen fully steady, ipta wen very light Plain to fair Cows sold at ides predominated. 00 to $9.75 and heifers $9.00 to 150. Calves wen weak to a dollar er with the best bringing $12.00 to Demand for jtoeken and aetive at firm prices, jquiry is from all sections and for classes. Fleshy kinds an going to mdloti and 'the thin an wanted for mmer grazing. Indications am that is prices will eontinne high. Hog prices were down five to ten mts from Saturdays dose and twen-- j to twenty-fiv-e under the high point at week. This decline left the gen-r- al market onlv slightly above the nr point of the season. . The heavy m in Chicago was the depressing Indications an that receipts rill diminish after this wejk. Today 80 to Bold at 7.85 to 8.00; 140 to 160 pounds $7.60 to $7,-230 to 300 pounds $7.50 to $7.85; acting sowa $6.25 to $7.00, and stock and pigs $6125 to $7.00. . heep and lamb prices wen weak to ifteen lower than last weeks close ; Thousand Weekly - NSAS CITY, Mo., March 5. r a continuation of small receiptsj. le prices ruled stronger and the to fifty er grades are twenty-fiv- e its higher today than the low point weeks ago. Receipt are not only it, but indication! are that runs in next ninety days will be below iaL Killers contend that the beef e ia dulL However, there is no imnlation of supplies in the ontlet stance, "lilarSS" means your subserto-lio- n runs out at that time. The date on. the paiier of the next copy of The Bus after your renewal is received is ear acknowledgment that we have received your money. Legal blanks of every kind. The Baa. SI SCRANTON, Pa., March 5. More than a thousand miners meeting in the Pittston district today rejected the peaee proposal as outlined here Satnr-da- y by union ehiefs and operators and will not return to work for a thirty', days trial period. The Pittston min--1 ere voted to name a committee to try for a new agreement on the proposal to resume work. This reaching her Saturday provided for certain of the miners returning to work for the trial . period in an endeavor to restore peaee in gunridden Pittston. ! 'j ANIMAL CONTROL WORKERS TO : MEET UP AT OGDEN Leaden in the predatory animal and rodent control work for United States biological survey throughout the entire country will gather at Og-dfor a conference on April 23d to 28th. The conference will be attended '' by Panl G. Redington, Washington, D. C., chief .of the biological survey; W. IL Henderson, associate chief; Stan--, ley P. Young, who is in charge of economic investigations for the bnreaa, and 8. E. Pyper, Denver, Cok., exeen- tive in c ha rye of research work for the bureau. Aeeording to Holman it will be conducted in three divisions. Two days will be spent in the reading of papers relating to predatory control; two to committee work on the subjects and the framing of neon mendations on the information and two will be given over to dissuasion of the committee reports. Thirty-fou- r different papers will b read. th. en . . ' - COLORADO HANOfr SELF IN HELPER JAIL ' MAN FROM HELPER, Maxell 5. Before the cries of inmate attracted attention pf the jailer Glen W. Maiden, 38 yean old, hanged himself in the Helper eity jail Sunday night about 10 oeloek. Before fixing hie necktie and hand- -. kerchief about bis throat and tying . the improvised rope to the frame of his prison cot ha requested fellow prisoners' in the adjoining cells to pray for him. A , Maiden, who is Mid to. have relatives in Kansas City, was arrested 1st Sunday afternoon on the main street, A here on a eharge of drunkenness. first attempt to hang himself wae frustrated by Night Marshal Bertino when Maiden attempted to make a rope out of tho bedclothing. This waa removed. Previous to bis arrest the suicide told folks that he had lost a considerable sum of money at Grand Junction, Coib., gambling. That government employe who has raised twenty children on eighty-fiv- e dollars a month ought to be moved over to the budget department. abrogated and tramp, id upon by the PitUbnrg Coal company and otlu rs in that region. Utc-d-, (Additional Coal Mining Nswa Oa lagra Six and Eight).1 C3 |