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Show it ICE OF TELLS TESTS BEAUTIFY UNITED STATES F, THUBSDAT, SEPTEMBER EVEKY THUKSPAY. THE SUN, PRICE. UTAH PAGE SIX mt 87, 199 m I i m PROFESSIONAL FUEL )R. L. J. STOOKEY Physician and Bargain Office Phone lOSw; Residence 881 Pries Commercial and Barings Bank ABOUT GAS FRANCHISE Building, Price, Utah. DR. J. 0. VERNAL, Hept. Support of the city officials, members of the Lions club and others in keeping the proxmed nntural gas line out of this state was sought here Saturday by Mayor W. Frank Olson of Price, He conferred with several group and outlined the widespread unrest and industrial upset that would occur if the gasline caused the curtailment of the Unexpenditures of cohI operators. der all sorts of condition in the coal business for the pant thirty years Utah producers have maintained the This top scale in wages, said he. ha caused general contentment with conditions and ha produced a high standard of living among the miners. This ia as it should be and' a reduction which would cause a lowering of such would be an unusually severe hardship on the workers and a direct loss in revenue to the merchants and tradesmen of this region. Coal and its production ia the very basis of prosperity in all of the fuel mining counties of the state. Withdraw thin or even an appreciable part of it and you cause a migration of miners and their families to other and more profitable fields and the entire region would eventually fall back into the condition and position it occupied a generation or more ago. Franchises already have been granted to the natural gas people in the principal centers of Utah, said Mayor Olson. Where the fuel consumers annarent-l- y do not sense the importance of the coal industry to themselves, as a last resort therefore, it is essential that the citizens of this part of the state rise to protect not only themselves, but other Utah people from the effects of ruinous competition. The matter is to be finally settled by the public utilities commission of Utah at Price on October 10th. If the franchise sought is granted it will reduce the coal market of the Carbon mines to at least the extent of 20 per cent and will curtail the number of present employes in the mines to the same extent, or about nine hundred families, whieh would result in the reduction of the population of the Carbon district in the approximate hundred and number of forty-fiv- e these miners would probably leave the state of Utah and go to fields in others, so that employes and their wages and tax paying abilities would be entirely lost to the state of Utah. HUBBARD Physician and Burgs 24. . Jensen by the United States land office. It is located in Salina Canyon. The terms of the lease require an initial investment of seventy-fiv- e thousand dollars to be expended during the first three years, and a minimum tonnage of thirty thousand by the fourth year of the lease. The government is to reeeive ten cent per ton royalty on all the coal produced. Thirty days have been allowed Jensen in which to pay the first years rental, to furnish a $10,000 bond and to otherwise comply with the regulations. Of flee Hours 2 to 6 p. m. Phono 2Ma f Residence Phone 234 t i )$ Eastern Utah Electric Building, . PRICE, UTAH Physician and Burgeon Office Phone 81; Residence 177 Bilvagni Bldg., Price Utah ANDREW W. DOWD. Diseases of thir-t.v-fi- HR. CONFERENCE semi-annu- al semi-annu- , H. B. GOETZMAN Dentist - AV Work and Extraction. Price Commercial Bank Bldg Price, Utah X-R- DB. GLENN WILLIAM BICHARDI Dentist Residence Office Phone 209. S92w PRICE, UTAH DR- - L 8. EVANS Dentist Office. Electric Building, PRICE, UTAH . DR- - T. J. ANTON Dmtist Phonee DR. Bilvagni' Bnildtng PRICE. UTAn 239; Residence Office 277-- J R. X. brogkbank Palmer Graduate Chiropractor 305--0 Electric Building PRICE. UTAH Office Hour : 10 to 12, 2 to 6 aad 6:80 to 8 ' Residence Phone 829v f Office Phone 15 OLIVER K. CLAY Attorney At Law Office I In County Courthouse PRICE, UTAH A. MCGEE Attorney At taw Rooms 5 and 6. Bilvirnl Building, PRICE, UTAH W GLENN HARMON Attorney and Ceenssier At taw Office. Bilvagni Building PRICE, UTAH I W. HAMMOND MMnAnAMnMMMNMaMn MM Licensed Ahetractor ef Titles United States Fuel company towns exemplify value ef annual garden competition. Upper picture shews Gerald Morgan's Abstracts of title furnished to aiy flower garden, Mohrbad, awarded second prise. Lower, D. V. Garbers garden, Hiawatha, first prise. Many were entered In ' piece or tract in Eastern Utah. Fire the contest. V,.j urance written in the beet eompsulm Reel estate bonds, etc. Second floor Building. Price, Vtah. Each ns a result of the are more than doable those of the of the best gardens flourish where year garden contests that are sponsored by the United States Fuel company the eoal towns of Hiawatha, Mohrland and Heiner are growing in beauty and qualities that make for healthful, sane and normal living. Few people realise that the vast numbers of men engaged in digging eoal most live in eampe wholly uninviting and uninspiring in aspect. If all the miners in the United States were marshaled in an industrial army at Washington, D. C, there would be twenty-on- e divisions of thouumd men each. Gotwenty-eiging down Pennsylvania avenue at a brisk elip it would take this host sixty hours to pass the reviewing stand. One out of every fifty men in this ht nation ia mining eoal in fields covering thirty states. The average output per man ia fonr and a half tons or four times the reeord of the nearest competitor, the British miner. The wages of the American miner, according to the National Coal association. . tHIM D. PRICE, UTAH LONDON, Sept. 25. Dr. Gutav Egloff, technical director of the Universal Oil Products company of Chicago, told the world nower conference today that the present coal field alone would supply enough gasoline to operate the thirty million automohunbile now in use for twenty-fiv- e dred years. There i enough shale oil to operate these automobile for four hundrod years, he said. As for crude oil he added: The total supply is assuredly of staggering volume. Otologists state that oil discovery is a possibility in 1,100,000,000 acres in the United State alone or 56 per cent of ita total land area. The contrast of this hngo territory with the two million acres producing oil at present makes certain that new fields will be continually discovered. What is true regarding the potential oil production of the United States probable is true even in great measure for many other countries of the world where oil exploration has been less thorough. The crudo oil will he the dominent source of gasoline for at least a century to Dr. Egloff showed how gascome. oline could be obtained bv the cracking process from fish, vegetable and peat oils, wood, tars and asphalt. - M Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat Glasses Fitted COAL FIELDS ABLE TO SUPPLY FOB YEARS TO COME Biz Hundred Jobless. PEORIA, Ilia., Sept. 22. Six hundred miners were jobless today, the result of an order by owners of Crescent Mines Nos. 5 and 6. When the . men left work yesterday they found notices announcing that the properties would be dosed indefinitely. After the new wage scale was adopted in Chicago the men at first refused to return to work, but were ordered to do so by union officials. Several days ago the drivers in the Crescent reCHEMISTS FLAN REVEALING OF fused to hitch their mules outside of NUMEROUS SECRETS working hours. Yesterday's order, however, gave no reason for cessation . PITTSBURG, Pa., Sept 21. The of work. beextent to which bituminous coal ia coming one of the worlds important Fuel Plant Coming. chemicals, transformed entirely from Plans for the establishment of a the familiar sooty commodity, is in- $3,500,000 plant for the preparation chein-number of dicated by the large smokeless fuel were outlined to the of ista coming to the second internation- - members of the Utah " Society of EnNoconference here bituminous coal al A. A. Roberts of Chicago gineers by vember 10th to 24th, inclusive. The at a meeting held the other evening heads of the chemical industries of at Salt Lake City. He explained that Europes four foremost industrial na- the Eastern capital he represented had tions are among the representatives of been making a study of the situation eighteen countries. They are Sir A- in Utah and was contemplating the llied Mond, England ; Donat Agaehc, establishment of a huge plant for the France; Dr. Karl Krauch, Germany, treatment of coal. He said that and Commondatore Alberto Eduardo hundred men would be employS. Dr. Thomas Bianehi, Italy. Baker, ed and that the concern would have the president of Carnegie Institute of an output of two thousand tons daily. Technology, ha called the conference. The chief aim, nays lr. Raker, is They Vote to Strike. to foster those transformation of PITTSBUltO, Kan., Sept. 24. The beat marketed in the coal whieh can bp United States. Secondarily, the con- strip miners of District 14 of the United Mine Workers of America yesgress will touch on all brandies of terday voted to go on strike until the from perfume coal proceedings, and drug to laboratory exeriments oneraturs agree to make an adjustin operating locomotive and internal ment of wages between strip and deep combustion engines with the jHiwdered working. Approximately sevpn hundred men are affected by the order. eoaL In Europe, coals chemical transformation ia ahead of that in the Unit- ABOUT THE CAMPS OF THE BIG CARBON DISTRICT ed States. The German dye trust, the I. G. Farbcnindustrie, is selling in the Castl Gate is putting on more minmotor fuel made from coal. cities ers right along. Close to four hunEurope is producing some methanol, dred men are at this time on the paya eoal derivative resembling alcohol roll there. distilled from wood for commercial Several miners from the Carbon disSeveral Eunqiean chemists are are said to have lately been put bringing to the rongres reiwrts on trict to work by the Chesterfield Coal comnewest the xesnlts the of research in , at Sego. . Mcessing, which is called low temp- pany erature distillation and prudures a Storage rates on coke at Salt Lake .chemical result different from that of City are off tonight (Thursday). In ' high temperature distillation. For ex- five to fourteen tons lots it sells for to a hundred $6.75. ample, fuel produced by the low temp- $7.25. Seventy-fiv- e erature process is said' by Dr. lloraee The bituminous mined in the United C. Porter of Philadelphia to have States during the week ended Septemto a relatively high degree a quality ber 15th, according to the estimate of of combustibility that may even need the National Coal association, reachpd to be restrained under some condi- the total of $10,300,000 net tons. That tions. aa reported by the United States bu-The low pressure process of Dr. ( Continued On Pace Eight) Friedcrich Rorgiu of Heidelberg has ' produced from eoal, benzol np to 15 eent of the quantity of eoal nsed, Kr oil and creosote to another 15 W4444444444444444 eent, fuel oil 20 er cent, and gas Sr per cent, which altogether ia 70 con The ninety-nint- h nee of the Church of Jesus 4 fere 4 eent the eoal. The processing of per h ninety-nintcon- - 4 The is another step toward tho day when vene in the tabernacle, Balt Lake 4 moke nuisance can be abated, and the City, Utah, on Friday, October 5, 4 fonndations are being laid rapidly in 4 1928. at 10 o'clock, continuing with 4 on Saturday and Sunday, 4 the United State. Dr. Baker says 4 sessions October Oth and 7th. The general 4 that a number of the great American 4 4 priesthood meeting will be held at 4 industries producing chemicals are ac- 4 the tabernacle on Saturday, October 4 Oth, at 7 o'clock. 4 quiring their own eoal lands, while op- 4 erators are experimenting with the 4 The Halt take, Ensign, Lilierty, - 4 4 Pioneer. Grant, Granite. (Vittonpossibilities of stopping their bitumi- 4 wood. Oiiuirrh. East and West Jnr-- 4 4 nous product at the mine mouth, and 4 dan stakes are requested to hold 4 tnrning it into several other products, 4 their Fast iHiy inerting on Hun- - 4 day. September With. 4 including fuel, before it goes to the 4 4 Missionary and other reunions 4 consumer. he should so 4 arranged ss not to con- 4 4 flirt with these appointments. 4 Lease Is Granted. 4 (Signed!, Hr her J. Grant, An tho- - 4 W. 4 Charles W. Ivin. tiy Niblcy, 4 . ... .The. other. day a. egal lease for ten 4 hundred and eighty aerra of" govern- 4 First Presidency. ,' 4 ment land was awarded to Rasmus N. JR, M D. CHARLES RUGGERI. formerly there existed an unsightly BEAN pile of rocks and sand. Prizes were BEN General Painting Contractor None all won by miners on day wpges. of the salaried men of the company Phone 188m PRICE, UTAH participated in the contest. The judging committee from Price, consisting E. FLYNN of Mrs. G. R. West, A. E. Gibson and J. Licensed Undertaker and O. P. Madsen, made these awards in contest fourth few annual a the in Heiner and days at Hiawatha, Mohrland Telephone 29 go. the yards of its employes. Living conLawn William Hansen, Mohrland, PRICE, UTAH ditions have not (Jnly been improved, but a healthful recreation provided first prize, $25.00; H. E. McNeil of HARMON for underground workers who need Heiner, second, $15.00 ; A. J. Allred, WALLACE ft McL. and sunshine Hiawatha, third, $10.00, Undertakers aad Licensed during their off hours the and fresh air of the open. As an ad- Donald, Mohrland, fourth, $5.00. Ambulance Service Flowers D. V. .Garber,. Hiawatha, ditional provision for good health, the One Block South of L. D. 8. Tsberaadi Office Phone 158. company owns and operates at a loss first prize, $25.00; Gerald Morgan, Res. 115m its own dairy farm, where, amid ideal Mohrland, second, $15.00; John PRICE, UTAH Heiner, third, $10.00, and conditions, a thoroughbred, registered herd of Holts teins supplies milk for the Sam Fadcl, Hiawatha, fourth, $5.00. Garden Martin Perrero of Heiner, various eamps. The company by bant- first prize, $25.00; Pierce Wilson, Hiing dirt and fertilizer free of charge awatha, second, $15.00; Joe Mirante, to the homes of employes. Rocks are Mohrland, third, $10.00, and Charles Highest efficiency, gathered up and seed provided. Many Lange, Heiner, fourth, $5.Q0. equivalent SI 04 lbs. Uaeqaallsd tor John Burt, Hiawatha, sweepstakes storage. Will not slack. The best for eteemlnf aad heating qnalttisa prize, $35.00. Sam Perkowski of Hiawatha, boys YEAR prize, $10.00. FOR INDEPENDENT COAL ft English. Desirous that the eyes of its employes should rest on something more gracious than the squalid conditions prevailing in the avenge camp, the United States Fuel company has encouraged garden contests. Results of this policy ean be seen on every side I IS FAX LEVIES IN DEEM COKE COMPANY CHRISTMAS State levy County purposes District schools ; 1927 1928 Mills Difference Mills 73 None .2 Increase None 6.7 9.1 22.9 Total levies outside eitiea and towns CITIES AND TOWNS 211 .2 A0 None 211 3 Increase 27.1 .2 Increase Increase . Caatle Gate Town levy 4.0 State, county and school Total Helper City 22.9 1 - 26.9 ' 17.0 22.9 17.0 Total Hiawatha Town levy State, eounty and school ... .39.9 40.1 Total Price City City levy State, eounty and .23.9 ; City levy State, eounty and school State, eounty and , Total Sunn.vsidfr Town levy State, eounty and State, eounty and Total .2 Increase Increase 22.9 .2 Increase 45.4 7 Increase 15.0 210 .37.9 ... school Total Wellington Town levy 24.1 J J 4.0 4.0 219 211 ..19 27.1 JO.O .52.9 .2 30.0 .211 school-..,..- ... None .2 Increase Increase None , 2 Increase .2 Increase CARDS It is not too early to think of this important subject. Our new samples re now ready for inspection. Seleetion now means that you ehoose from an unbroken line of the ehoieest designs the market affords. Your printing or engraving may then be done without hurry, assuring that perfection of workmanship whieh you desire and whieh it is The Suns constant aim to produce. Foresight now is a positive protection against disappointment a little later in the season. Order now. Mines at Kenilworth. Utah. General Offices Walker Bank BaOdtog SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH STAY IN REPAIR Bead plumbing fixtures stay In repair. We handle everything from ioay dishes to ahowere, and every Item h the ntmoat that honest, skilled effort ean mako it Seed Plumbing aad Heating Co, North Carbon Avenue, Price, Utah. &: i The young folks used to eing We PRORATE AND GUARDIANSHIP NoGo Home Until Morning tices Co nauK County Clerk Or ' and now they actually dont. Bignere Tor Further Informs tin. Wont Increase NOTICE None .2 Increase ....i-22i- , sehooL 2 1.0 22.9 ... school Total Scofield Town levy None .2 Increase 211 'it NOT AT ALL TOO EARLY FOR IN CARBON COUNTY Mills : 7.3 6.5 9.1 j ' TO WATER USERS STATE Engineer's Office. Balt taku City, Utah, Sept 22. 1928. Notice ia hereby given that the Denver and Rio Grande We tern Railroad rompany, whose principal place of brndneea is Halt Lake City, Utah, baa made application in accordance with the requirements of the Compiled Laws of Utah, 1017. aa amended by the Hnwion Lawn of Utah, 1010 and 1025, to appro- .jriate .10 c.f.s. of water from Price river In Carbon connty, Utah. Haid water in tn be direrted at a point which bears 1375 feet south and 043 feet east of the northwest corner of Bee. 222. Twp. 13 South, Range 11 East, Halt Lake bane and meridian, and conveyed by meana of a pipe a distant of twenty feet, where it will be used during the entire year to supply applicant's railroad locomotives at rarnhem. Utah. This use consumes all of said water. This application Is designated in the state engineer's office as Kile No. 10408. Ail protest against the grantin' of said appHcation, stating the reason therefor must be by affidavit In diinllratf accompanied with a fee of $1.00, and filed in this office within thirty (.T days after the completion of the publimi-tio- n of this notice. GEORGE M. BACON, NOTICE TO CREDITORS ESTATE of Felicia Bilvagni, Deceaned. Creditor will preaent claims with vouchers to the undersigned at Price, Utah, ou or before the 12th day of November, A. H 1928. P. O. BILVAGNI, Administrator of the Estate of Felicia Bilvagni, Deceased. Henry Ruggeri, Attorney For Administrator. First pub., Sept 0; last Sept. 27. 1928. NOTICE TO CREDITORS ESTATI of Leon Verdlllion, Aim Known Ai Leon Verdillon, Deceased. Creditors will present rlaim with vouchers to the at Price, Utah, on or before the 10th day of November, A. D., 1928. GLENN N. NELSON, Administrator of the Entate of Leon Verdillion, Aim Known Aa Leon Verdillon, Deceased. Henry Ruggeri, Attorney For Administrator. First pub. Sept 13 ; last Oct NOTICE TO CREDITORS 4, 1928. A ESTAT of J. U. Hixson, Deceased. Creditor will present claims with vouchers to thl undersigned at Bunnyside, Carbon conniy, Utah, on or before the first "day of A. I).. 1928. MINNIE Y. HIX State Engineer. SON. Administratrix of the Estate of J-Hat of first publication. Hept. 27. 1928. Hixson. Deceased. II. V, Dalton, AtDale of completion of publication, Lk't. 25, torney .For Administratrix. 10228, First pub., Sept 27 ; last Oct 11, 1028, 'V.V Vi |