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Show PAGE SIX THE SUN, PRICE, UTAH THUR8DAY, 2211 PROFESSIONS EVERY THURSDAY. V HR. L. J. STOOKEY PhysWaa and Surge Pheae 168 w; B u Price Cesamercial and SarSuTn--S Building, Pries, UiaJ" Office AS TO WAGES AGREEMENT i HR. J. 0. HURRAED i Ind., July. 2Q. District officem of tha United Mine Workers of American today were free to negotiate with coal operators on INDIANAPOLIS, i : basis, any "mutually satisfactory provided all agreements be submitted to a district convention for referendum. Thus one of the basic principles of the union policy in the bituminous fields the uniform wage scale for all union miners was discarded by a decision yesterday of the international policy committee in an attempt to cope with the depressed conditions in the country. With the abandonment of the base wage of the famous Jacksonville, Fla., agreement, which assured union miners $7.50 per day and per ton from 1924 to 1927, was dropped as no longer an effective basis for n wags negotiations. It was the of this agreement April 1, 1927, which reeulted in the present bituminous suspension. It wee made- plain, however, that pending negotiation of any new agree mants the Jacksonville scale would prevail. The new union poliey will afreet aboat a hundred and fifty than in the central competitive sand mines field ' (Western Pennsylvania, Ohio, Indiana and Illinois) and the outlying districts of Missouri, Kansas, Okla hosas. Idaho, Montana, Wyoming and Nevada. Many of the mniei in these places have bean idle same the fifteen months ego. Hope wae expressed in miner circles that the district agreements wonld result in re sumption of operations. Indiana operators said they were ready to meet the miner in wag eopfereaeea and indicated they would demand the 1917 scale of five dollar per day. Large Fennsvlvanin operator whose mines n basis for have been on nearly four yean said they had. defi- -. nitely broken with the anion and wonld, not consider further negotiations with it. Agitation by the miners of Southern Illinois for the right to negotiate sep--' ante wage agreements brought befora the poliey committee the question of whether ehanged conditions in the fields required a modification of the union policy. The committee assembled July 11th at the call of President John L. Lewis. In a statement announcing the committee's ae lion Lewis said: "The committee conducted a comprehensive review of conditions ia all districts of the bitamin-ou- s industry and canvassed the situation in the various fields whan strikes are in effect. .It bes formalated an mended policy, designed to best with the depressed conditions in t! bituminous Industry as they now ex- -. -- $1-0- 8 esn-ratio- sas-ponah- m . v ... non-unio- . r . i 4. V'i n ; Til GAS PROMOTER PUTS OUT HIE SIDE OP THE STORY iiA Operators Hold Aloof From the Men OfOes PRICE, ins mine in Jeff) .county wove attacked by- a group of approximately fifty hten and women today as they drove past the Blaine property4 near rente hack to work after a two days vacation.. Three of the men, Geoigq White, Galvin White and C J. Barley, wen hurt Seriously, physi--i said. The fourth, Paul Kinder, only slightly bruised. No arrests had ben made, late today, hut .Proas-ente- r Pul V. Waddell said ha would make an investigation and that such f - rom-imum- L" i it.:: tcmiH-ntur- e ' la MV ' M. D. Ejrtb Kmfv Nose sad Tfcmt Obsess Fitted Multum pro parvo PRICE, . UTAH QUL&MRXKAI U Built by'ff alter P. .X-Ra- De Soto Six is a new conception in efficiency graphic evidence of the great strides which scientific manufacturing has taken .V A'tl in greatly increasing ' the buying power of. the motor car dollar. DeSoto Motor Corporation : : . .. (Dividtu ' . I l2 PRICMl.UTAH. 0R six-cylind- er - if f Wash and Rz traction, Bank RMs, Pries, y . IAHTOED EALLOran fcrsSrJK5r1B-ii- ,' QR.LS. EVANS r PRIOR, UTAR DR. T.J. ANTON lu Silvsgni-Build- Phones DR- - Chrjiltr Ctrptrdtieu) Detroit, Michigmn ;Besidence 2T7-- J XIGUOXB F-'- PhnMtasgtomri C Pint National Bank eompo-siltio- ' Bssidsam REDREW W. DOWD, UTAH PRODUCT COMING ALONG TOR EXPERT TESTS Thereat two sides to eveiy question. . That is why The San is quoting L. B, Denning,. president of the Lone Star (ha company, on the mat- -. tar of bringing into Utah natural gas from Wyoming and which anquestion-abi-y would1 curtail pal eoasamption ervatives... from the Carbon, district. jVPsar that The results of the 1927 fellowship bringing gas here will disrupt ths coal have shown that considerable percent' not on baaed business is Asets," say of heavy oils and waxes can be ho. Taking the coal producers' own ages isolated from this Utah tar. .Theae figures, he declared, Utah last year interestin' possibilities for net out upwards of four and a half present technical utilisation. Due to the presmillion tona-jOthis amount 1cm than ent interest in the const ruction of sev20 per cent waa consumed in the local eral large scale low temperature car, market Using every facility at our bonization plants in ths Eastern Unitcommand we could not affect more ed States to it was deemed than half of the- production. ' On the make a similar thorough important examination other hand it 111 take at least three of the composition of low temperature tyeani. for. this territory to reach the tar from Eastern coals. The differgas saturation point By that time ence between the composition of the new and larger markets will have been Eastern and Western coals ia considdeveloped on the Facifie Coast and erable, therefore a special examination other sections of the country. It is of the Eastern tarjj will he of great my understanding that me of tbs big benefit to this infant industry. ' transcontinental railroads is soon to Dr. Brown and Irey will determine abandon oil burning locomotives, furn- the relative amounts of motor fuel, ishing a very great outlet with this creosote for temper preservation and concern." raw materials for wax and resin In this connection Denning aian in one or more tars produced points out the Jong haul market of the in 'large scale technical low temperaPacific Coast 'is much better for the ture carbonization plants using East- railroads. In other sections of the ern eoal The exumihation wij be country, says Denning, our natural gas made in such a manner as to facilitate with eoal companies are with the results obtaina and electric power concerns. In this edcomparison from the low temperature product connection the gas company official from the Utah eoal. referred to a situation over at Denver, Colo. Gas, he said, ie being piped to Denver from the North Texas, fields REDUCED PRICES AND CHARGES ARE NOW FORECAST and the Colorado Fuel and Iron commuch eoal which of the supplies pany, WASHINGTON, D. C July 2L in the is to Colorado, ' may tend to obscure July project. In fart, declared Denning, in the public mind the importance of the fnel company is planning to use a tha action of the policy committee of large emonnt of natural gas in its the United Mine Workers of America plants. Denning estimates the this week in receding from the union's ing of gas into Salt Lake City will position that Yhe basis of wage negosave the people of that valley up- tiations be the Jacksonville, Fla., wards of $1,000,000 ' annually. This scale. But it foreshadows that when is the actual consumption of fuel ami wintry 'blasts begin to blow the conliriit, to say nothing of the expense sumers will he able to fill 'their hint saved by eliminating ihebmoke nuis- with soft eoal at 1cm than in the last ance ami Tvdueing the cleaning bill, ten years. After having been in sesPractically evry town of any sixe sion a week at Indianapolis, Ind., the in Ohio ia supplied with' natural gas, committee, whieh controls imsaid Denning. The name thing is true poliey affairs of the international portant of Western Pennsylvania, Northern union of miners between conventions Kentucky, and also Northern Texas. 'A of that organization, reached the connumber of elertrie power and light clusion that district unions may negocompanies are using it to generate the tiate individual contract! with operaelectricity. tor. Unless there is an agreement At this point Denning expressed the among district leaden which does not opinion that if natnral gas esn under- appear on the surface of the official soil fuel oil in the Texas fields eoal announcement, this action means the producers of Utah can do the same end of a uniform scale of wages in the unionized fields for an indefinite perthing on the Pacific Coast iod in tho future, the first time this Women Attack Miner. condition has obtained since tho United Mine Workers came into power thirty ST. CLAIRS VI LI .E, O, July 19. Four men employed at the Glen Rob-- years ago. Unionized mines will be WBQBUJX, MR. SUvaiai Bldg., Pike Utah ; sives,' colon, dyes, medicines, photographic chemicals and soforth that an produced from high temperature eoal tar. The industrial utilisation of low temperatni tar must he developed in a similar way. This cannot be done without knowledge of its composition. Ths thne successive National Coal Association fellowships working under Dr. R. L. Brown, organic chemist of the bureau of mines, have succeeded in determining the amount of motor fuel and its character in ths eoal Jar from ths Utah product They have, likewise, worked out the proportion of tar eeids und aeid resins whieh are valuable constituents for temper pres- UTAH Pheae SI) Offies . Kenneth M. Irey of Monmouth, Ills., was last week appointed to the National Coal Association Research fellowship at the Carnegie Institute of Technology and the United States bun reau of muses to determine the of tar produced in the low temperature carbonisation of the Eastern fuels The work is to be along lines similar to those developed by preceding fellowships, working on low temperature tar from a Western eoal. It is a recognised 'fact that the success of lower temperature carbonisation of any coal depends upon profitable disposal of tbs smokeless fuel and the byproducts. The composition of high temperature tar made by existing gas and soke making processes is fairly well known. Great industries have been built up on such. It. is need 1cm to mention the many varieties of explo- QHARIjKR J - onnsamiMu ' s CLEVELAND, O., July 20. The United Mine Workers union in Ohio met a prompt refusal today when it invited the operator of this state to meet it on July 26th to discuss a new wage seals. The miners invitation issued at Columbus by the executive committee of the union a short time after 8. H. Robbins, president of the Chio Coal Operators association, had declared hers that the operators would bavo'ne further dealings with tha United Mine Workers of Amcr-Notified of the (invitation Robbins said merely that . his previous statement stood, and no formal reply to the miners bid bean mads tonight probably would follow. PtmlMsn and I Hears 3toSp.m. BnUdLag PRIOR, UTAH Much for little SOM Electric Baildlng in a position to compete with and union districts will compete with the other union districts for the market. This competition, with a lower labor eost in the unionised fields, will tend to force even lower prieee to the consumer. Another malt of this action by the international union probably will he an intensifieation of the hitter feeling. over the lake cargo case in the struggle between Northern and Southern soft eoal operators for the markets of the Northwest. With wages in the unionized fields of the North and n those of tiie field of the South mold nearly on a parity, aa made possible by the unions recession non-uni- on first three years with a minimum production of five thousand tons per year also is required. The other terms of the contract are those of the standard government lease. Political Announcement C, N. (Buck) Orr, general superin- tendent at Hiawatha, was in Price on Saturday last The Blaek Hawk mine of the United States Fuel ie working three days each week, says he, while Mohriand is doing ithe same. He looks for increasing orders for eoal within the next few weeks, whieh means more men at work. The purchasing department at Salt Lake City has advertised for bid for furnishing thirteen thousand tons of eoal for toe various state institutions. from toe Jacksonville scale, every The date for filing bids was fixed for eent in freight rate is going to count (Oostinuad Oa Face Hfht) more heavily in the battle to reach tbs consumers. How fsr the railroads will continue to go in this fight be- IN THS SEVENTH JUDICIAL District Court la end for Carton County. tween operators arisen now as a ser- Bute of Utah. K. W. Crockett, Plaintiff, ious question, and then have been ru- vn Eaeretto CL Bmith aad John Y. Smith, mors that managers of important car- Wife and Husband. Marie CL Bansea, H. Walah. Utah L comTruM Savings and riers have concluded that a price war a. Corporation, Price Biver Water between mine owner should not. he pany, OoHcrvatida District, a Corporation, and permitted to bring a rate .war between Carton. County, a Body Corporate and railroads and that a compromise rate Politic of the State of Utah, Defendants. Sheriffs Sale. To bo sold at sheriffs sale agreement may he attempted. on the 18th day of August, 1928, at 3 and Three year ago Pennsylvania 'dock pu m., on tke front otepe of tha Qhio operator petitioned the inter- county courthouse in Price, Carton counUtah, the following described state eommerre commission for a hug- ty, state of property aituated in Carton county, Mate er differential between rates from of Utah, towif; The northeast quarter their fields to lake ports and rates of the northeast quarter of Sec. 29, Twp. 14 Bouth, Range 10 East. BaKLake from the 8onthem fields to the same with all improvements ports. The commission first denied a thereon. together Doted at Price, Carton county, ingreater spread, then reversed and I tab, this 10th day of July, 1928. 8. hi creased the differential twenty cents BLISS, 8heriff of Carton County, Utah! a ton. Southern carriers involuntarily Pirat pub., July 13: last, Aug. 2,1928. cut their basic rate twenty eents, thus PUBLICATION nullifying the commissions order. The NOTICE FOR toe Interior. United States commission directed them 'to restore Land Officeof At Salt Lake City, Utah. the old und higher rates; hut a temp- June 27, 1928. Notice to hereby given Louie Bonae obtained was of Helper, Utah, who tot orary injunction against mode 1921, Homestead this order, whieh case is pending on 2? No. 030201, for XWNE14, BHXEiZ appeal. The Northern Toads eut their S3, Bee. 84. 8W8Wf rates twenty eents, again increasing SE? IS South, Bange 9 East. Salt Lake the spread. In the meanwhile the sen- meridian, haa tiled notice of intention to proof to emablioh claim ate rejected one nomination to mem- make to tha land above deecrihed before IL G bership on the interstate commerce commission because of this rate ease. "to. notary public at Price, Utah, on non-unio- - mer-idia- three-yea- r the 7th day of August, 1928. Claimant witneenee J. 8. Edward and UelP". Utah. Giovanni ABOUT THE CAMPS OF THE BIG Riccardi of Heiner, Utah, and Carl NyCARBON DISTRICT man of Price, Utah. ELI F. TAYLOR. Register. Zion brokers are bidding seventy-on- e First pub., June 20; last. July 20, 1928. cents for the United States Fuel asked. shares with seventy-si-x Utah producers of eoal are not as badly wrought up, it is said, over the coming of natural gas from Wyoming to numerous towns and cities in this state as might he thought from a reading of the newspajiers. The Great Western Goal (preferred) bonds are offered by Balt Lake City broker at $2.00 and the ordinary at twenty rents. Mutual Coal chares, $1.00. Peerless Coals will bring sixteen cents. One forty ie being offered for Great Western preferred. Total productiiti of bituminous in the United States during the week ended July 14th is estimated by the National Coal association at 8,650,000 net tons. The bureau of mines repoi ed output for tha week ended June 30th as 8,444,000 net tons and for the seven days including July 7th as The department' if the interior is offering for lease a hundred and seres of land as a eoal leasing ight unit (No. 165) in Mwa county, Colo. It is in a developed field. The terms of the lease require the payment of ten emits per ton for the first five years. and fifteen thereafter. An initial investment of $10,000 during the thirty-e- OfOes Office Fhoao 15 To the People of the Seventh Judicial District of the State of Utah: hereby announce that I am a candidate for nomination for the office of district judge, to succeed myself, aub-jeto tiie will of the republican district convention whieh will he held about the time of the state convention in August, 1928. I am deeply grateful for the support whieh has been accorded to me in part elections. The training and experience whieh I have had upon the bench have been of great value to me, whether, at the end of the present torn, I am retired to the practice of my profession or continue to serve the public in a judicial capacity. If nominated and elected for another term I will dedicate my time and what ability I may possess wholeheartedly to the performance of the dnftiee of that high office. DILWORTH VTOOLLEY. (Pzid Political Advertisement). et dem-rib-- fe ar Iilrch. J. D. Uritchlow! "d El wood Mathis L'rt EU F' TAYIIt! SgSeJ law Gourtkenee PRICE, UTAH Ij.A.lbOEB At Law 6 and SRvngnl BuUdlac, ", PRIOR, UTAH . 0L DALTON At Law Office In the SUragnl Bnildiac, ' PRIOR, UTAH FIKMnZUK H. WOODS At Law PRIOR, DEAR PRK9LUTAH p. one-thir- d lf J er five-eight- ' pur-jwe- accom-9""i'd,?ri- th of pub .Jul3r 19 ! dto Aug. 10, 192A ot ram-pieti- to water users state NOTICE W City' Uti. Jute ki. 1928. Notice that George N. Hill, whose hereby given poatoffice i? mem!: cJoh'of Mathis, .,,r'?Vnderron Ia Oeuaty Rh J. ffi.d,Tit, to duplicate 31.00, and filed In within thirty (30) daye after foe completion of the publication of thia GEORGE M. BACON, State En-DE-- Iriil iZ Attorney At . I sal Besidenee Phene OUTER K. OLAY' Office to NOTICE TO WATER U8ER8 STATE if Titira Engineers Office, Balt feke City, Utah, July 16, 1928. Notice ie hereby given Abstracts of title famished to MT that the Utah Fuel Company, a corpora-toer tract to Raatora Utah. Itoo visit principal place A business ia face ranee written In tha beet eempatiga Balt Lake (Sty, Utah, has made applica-tto- n in accordance with the requirements Real ertste kraBa, etc. Boosed fleer m Jf 8c. A Chap. 67, 8ession Laws of Utah, vagni Building! Price, Utah. 1919 and 1925,' to change the point of diversion and nature of use of REN BEAN- c.f.o. of water from Price river in CarGenwnl Painting Ceatraetor bon county, Utah. Heretofore raid water wee diverted by virtue of the Morse de-0Plume 188m through the Tidwell canal at a point PRICE, UTAH which ia at the southeast corner of NEM 8E14 Hc. 84, Twp. 14 South, Benge 10 E. FLYNN 8slt Lake base and meridian, and used for the irrigation of land embraced Amhwleire Service toe MtRWH.BRXWK Sec. A Twp. 15 South, Benge 11 East, Bait feke base Telephone 39 and meridian. It ia now desired to diPRICE! UTAH vert the water at a point which bean 875 feet north and 675 feet west of the eouth-rarnHARMON of the BRKBWfc Bee. 20, WALLACE Twp. 12 8outh, Bange 9 Eaat, and convey UnJwtekar and Lleenoed Ernhato by means of canal a distance of of a mile to a filter, where it will Ambulance Service be used for culinary and domestic e One Block South of L. D. 8. Tabomatit by inhabitants of Castle Gate town. Office Phone UA. Baa 115n This application io designated in the state PRICE, UTAH engineers office All File No. ainM the granting of said Mating the res none therefor aWSL NOTICE FOB PUBLICATION toe Interior, United States Ls.ud.Gf fire At Belt Lake (Sty, Utah July 10. 1928. Notice la hereby given that ktora Ann llathis of Price. Utah, who on February 311. 1919, made Desert Kntrv No. 02IHI02. for Lota 8 end 19. Twp. 13 Bomb, Range ll feM Sd 9EV8Ei4 8ec. 24. Twp. 13 Bouth, Range 10 Fast, Salt feke meridian, has filed to Intention to make final establish claim to the land above proof to before Arthur J. Lee. notary public at th 1S,h day of August, ' J928. Claimant names as witnesses J. g. PRICE, UTAH Hears: 10 to 1R 8 6R0 to 8 tv Find pub.. July 13; last, Aug. 9. 1928, 12 Fast NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION of the Interior, United fend Office At 8ait feke City States Utah Notice ie hebf 1928, July 10, kiTwn Harris Pcroulis (romamnly m Hera 1 Harry Peroidi) of Hunnyside, Utah who IW b jV Utah, haa rvoruance with to. the (Vimpiled fews 3 retirethe Lawn of e1025, "PPPriuto five fijj .Sunnyside. Cotton- - UtanS?11 ,n C,rbon ?U?2hH'C.S vmiSi npMI imi Slot Wlva Meraga WIU net HVNNMff far eteaming ani U8lW?r stock. The-tat- i klhf INDEPENDENT nlll COAL COKE COMPANY Hlnae a Kentiwerth. Utah. G oral Offleaa WnRar Bank Brildto SALT LAKE CRY, UTAH STAY IN REPAIR Ruth, Range Read plumblnf fixtnraa itay is w pair. Wa handle everything front oM dtohaa to ahowtrf, and vry th utmoot that honait, akUtod ,25b?wd l parte of can aaka It. RmA Fhmblni Mf. South, Range 12 M Twp. base end meridian TM Heating Co, North Carhon Atom Is spplicatinn In designated the Mate eng- Plica, Utah. ineers office ea File No. 10300. AI1 th. itoi" epplice- Dr. W. J. Kant, eurator of meridinn. haa filed notice of Intention effldevft u i?" therefor by fo ".be make threeorear proof to establish ing Collage Museum, ha taken W" claim with of ti ."p,i72i rrompanied to a withTn ofthis I? Lhf rfu before fiW drribd giant turtle measuring five frt the fW district court at Price. Utah than U and estimated to bo not 1 on the 21st day of August, 1928. (Tain, hundred old. nt names aa witnesees Gust Mnmagakk years Ktrve Tgamethakia, Siefe Alfieris snA Anton Vstsm all of Bunnyside, Utah. Read in Tha Sun what Prie fflere fcU F. TAYIJIR, Register. anta ara offering. It will pay t0 P11?: FirM pub., July 13; last, Aug. 9, 102A the advertiaomenta and then buy Wedding announcements. Tiie Sun. this city. bu' t nt S " o?4 "Vd . . |