OCR Text |
Show THE BUM, "PRIOR. it jw I , ' to y . ' t jv . . ;v ri ' T UTAH-EVE- BY MB . VITAL The American fanner umirr gilinipixtration. Iiaa had pracmonopoly of hit home martically ket. In thix protect wi market, he .of 05 jut cent of his' product at price higher than are mid cIms where in the world for like product. This j (minted out in tha republican campaign textbook. , . 7 i . v r . r. i . a - .v H..Xing,' hi v-. Senator,;.-Willta- ' been-i- - . n , office; iuppocedly to represent .the people of .Utah) what has he .den to help 'ftnr state? ' Have his actions in Washington uared with.'hii glowing promises in Utah? The record 'says, NOr tah want to tolerate any- longer ' Senator who obstructs and cancels the efforts of Reed Smoot to really protect UtahVpjociucers ? The issue is clear protection and prosperity .against-h- o r knou protection'-andepression. .Vote for the Party gives protection 1 : . Tha. complet .. t THE FACTS -- . Themselves SpEak for '. it a tariff oa Utahs Patty in Coafrtia The Rtpablkaa plsctd ia- -. Not oat word of dtfeaae or oa. cheat ittmi waa attend by. Senator William H. Kia Democratic Senator from Utah. Oa the contrary, hen ie what he mid of that Tariff bill, ai bis ipctch ti ncorded in hr. ' Congtemional Record of Jane 27, 1922, on pap 8525:- . "Such ie thii Republican tariff bill iaiquitioBt, infamous, ' damned befon it ie bom; dtrtined to be damned during its life time, and doomed to damnation and obloqny after ha dtath.. Senator King "wu paired 'against the passage of tbc Tariff Act of ' Tariff Bill) aa will be 1922. H. R. 7456 (Foidncy-McCumbfound papagt 11627. of, .th .Congrtnioiial Reeded' of 'August 19." 1922. Tnii wu ia efface a wife against tha bill.' Senator King voted eyei'nif the passage of the Conference Report Tariff Bill, u will be fonad oa on the 13935 (Temporary Record) of the Coagienional Record of wee paired aa well ai the Coaft Mbs 19, 1922. The hill from Senator King! no help Report; bat through --v M S Austria of tape. wool, and of the fata impoacd lead- - REPUBLICAN -- TICKET. National s - Fotdney-McCnmb- ' Pa - . King Against the Farmers CEO BOB ; va - r. PARK BB ' . Par Slata Tieewiw ClUITBNin Par Stnta AnSItav' L DDSDI, TVOH AJAR a Par SooaHataaArae - at DR. O. N. JENSEN Paa Jaa ticca a( tha Saarami Caart W.M. POLLAN D EPHRAIM RANSOM ctnerl Utah nteda a aolid Republican delegation in Washing-to- n to inruie the continnance of protective policies: unth end Mp Retd Emtit Bamberger to Smoot ia the Smalt: Don B. Colton and E. O. Leather wood to cany oa their valuable work foe Utah in Con grew. And Utah needs a Republican governor William particularly, because a vote for Mr. Wattit . H. Wattir i opponent may mem e vote for a Democrat U. S. Sm-- ) a ator intanurh aa the governor haa power to appoint Senator in event of e vacancy dicing a term And Utah need Republican in every, irate office, to jhtR Utah the fuHe benefit! of harnjonioue adminia t ratxin nadir Repobiicaa policies. . Vi . . i , . 1 , (Paid Political Advertisement) Mr GUARDIANSHIP NOH AND Oennty Oarfc Or - Vn Further Information. i: jCL ' 1CK TO CREDITORS Demtei f ESTATE Craditora Belt Imke meridian, hae filed notice of intention to make three-ym- r proof to estaB-lie- h claim .to the fopd above described before II. C. 8mith, notary public nt Price, Utah, bn the' 7th day of November, 1928. Claimant, namee aa witneaaea J. L. Workmen, E. I. .Workman and Nqihi Parkin, all of Kin, Utah, and 'J. E.' Babcock, of Price, Utah. ELI F. TAYLOR, Rmhfer. First pub. Oct 4; bet Nov.' 1, 1928. r preamt clnima with vouch en p the luigned at the office of W. O. Har--' attorney tlaw, Bilvagni building, i, Utah, on or before the 6th day of ary, 1929. WILLIAM E. STOKER, utor of Last Will and Testament of NOTICE-- . FOR - PUBLICATION of the Interior, United States Berglund, Deceaued. Tond Office At Balt Lake City, Utah, pub., Oct. 4 ; lnat Oct 25, 1928. October 10,. 1928. Notice b hereby given CE TO CREDITORS ESTATE that Morgan L Pace of Price, Utah, who Theodore Taailiou, Deceaned. Credit-il- l on December 8. 1928, made StockrnMng preamt cbiem with vonchera to liomeutend Entry, No. 031793 for EVi Atlau building, 8VVV4. 8EV4 Sec. 29. WV48WV4 Sec. iW. idersigned nt 813-1- 3 Lake City, Utah, or at Price, Utah, W Vi Sec. S3, Twp. 11 8outh, Range 11 A. Eaet; Salt Iaike meridian, has filed nobefore the 15th dny PHILLIP VASILION, proof tice of intention to make three-yea- r r of the Eatate of Theodore to Attibliih ctaim to tha. land above Deceaned, Box 545, Prii, I'tah. X. before C. D. Pope, Notary Public, Attorney For Adminia- - residing at Helper, Utah, on the 19th day of November 1928. Claimant name m pub. Oct. 18; bat Xov. S. 192H. witnemrN VV. II. Carter of Nepki, Utah, John M. IiOveland of Helper,' Utah, Ctar-enPUBLICATION FOR 9B9ICE Anderson and W. N. Stringham of of the Interior, United Statee Irice, Itah. ELI F. TAYLOR. Regia, Office At Salt Lake City, Utah. 28, 1928. Notice ia hereby Fh-e- t pub.. Oct. 12; bat Nov. 8. 1928. that Lewis Workman of - Price, who on December 8. 1023,- made Turners new official map of Price Entry No, 083038, for- 8 Vi Lithographed. For isle at NirU. NEK8EV4. 8ec. 15. NWV48WV4, City $1.00.offiee. The very latest out The Sun 12 14 South, East, Range Twp. Ik14, w -- I Rqnbfican Tickri nt : , , ' CHRLE8 Ikd m. - 5'f $ Small shapes Aeadithe mode and are dein the smartest df styles shown by signed :Hus. Pokes, eyebrou) hats', oft Then there are the very popular with small and medium brims that may be turned this way and that to suit one's own individuality. -- the-face af-fair- vag-abon- I Styles shown at our store are velvets, ' s. ds me-j- j hatters f. plush, tallies, wood brown, tarn, te Monet blue, wood felts, soleils, black and $ navy blue . A It emphasizing style and lead A CURTIN Senator ERNEST BAMBERGER , - Governor WILLIAM H. WATTI8 Congrem. Flint DUtrict a DON COLTON ('ongreiw. Second Diartict & O. IJ5ATHKBWOOD Secretary of State JOHN W. PETERS Attorney General GEORGE P. PARKER State Treasurer A. CHRISTENSEN ' State Auditor IVOR AJAX Superintendent Public Infraction Da CL N. JENSEN . i Juaticea of the Supreme Court . W. H. FOLLAND . EPHRAIM HANSON '' a . type--- , Jle , knows TJtoh , interesUr- - be. love. .hi native...atato and I kqow of po one better qualified o go teVhingthd &dtreonent-tah, with Senator Reed Smoot Theeorfdiliona in' Idaho and Utah are very- similar. Both need protecthe prosperity of their tive tariff farming pppulatibn and prosperity in general. 'flreil'n 'not even imagine the' peqpl bf Utah voting to sefid a man to' the 'senate who will not work with instead- of against your illustrious Reed8moot. Aeemnpanying Senator Jhomaa, who waa appointed to take the seat of the late Senator F. Lu Gooding, and. who ia a candidate to" aneeeed himself, were John MeMnrray, republican etate chairman of Idaho and B. W. Katem-dah-l, chaiTman of the- Idaho 8tate Hoover-Cu- rt ia club. Mr. MeMnrray said there-- ia abaolutoly .no question about. the aueeeaa of the state qnd national ticket jn.hi state. . nI m kure there will be n un'preeedent landslide in Idaho,1 he V . - - - : more vital than the party; that it waa one of the glories of par free institutions that; ihough wa engaged in spirited rivalries- for political preferment, yet .when the choiee had ,heen made by a majority,, the minority yielded, abiding by the result; and that onr free institution would continue tq exiaf only no long aa the eftisena of th country yielded obedience to this principle.' , I athin bespoke for Mr. Bamberger the" support of all those who had honored me by working for my own nomination. I atilf have these hehtiments and maintain these prin.H ' 'l J ciples. " In my view, th need of a republican victory in the approaching election ia imperative. ) The nation aa it today, ij. founded upon 'repub-iea- h policies. From all one can gather here, the election, of Hoover' and v L.-- -. Curtiais assured. more than a quarter of no man in the senate .baa done mdre to uphold and advance republi-ea- n polieiea than Senator Smoot. vFor the peat twelve years bii vote on great haa beep negatived republican-issueby tha vote of his colleague who ia a member of .the opposite party. He is again asking the eitfaena of Utah to send to the senate someone who will vote with him. .has promised the people of the state jthat if elected hwwill vote with Senator Smoot Senator Smoots aerviee to the party,. io the athte,'and to the nation, justifies him in the expectation that.aU-a- f na .republicans in1. Utah: will o east oiir .votes aa to grant hi j. reqtieat. Nor nhould the republicans of the state' atop at this because it. ia. also - s r of paramount importance that .they shall return to eonereas our. two re- - , AND OURttS HOOVER . ARE ORGANIZED 6lub$ .... : at is elobawere organised Sunnyaide last. Monday with. Jess Hoover-Cu- rt Leamaster a president and Joe Nayi lor es vice president, Claude .Cowley, secretary. . ,Vjee ebairme aqd executive committee Watkin G. Durant, A, E. Hopkinaon, Nela Nelson, Henry' LaTnrner, Henry H. Jones, Lewis Riche and C. 'Arthur . being-Fran- ' Lundqniat! ' At Kenilworth C. W. .Peterson was chosen to. head the organisation ,wjth Howard Chriatenaen a secretary and the following vice preaidenta, John Burton, Charles .Johnson, Well Mof-O- tt apid the executive committee of George Umber, A'. T. Reid, Sam Wood-heaW. H. Wood head and Superin- ' tendent W.' F. dark. The Harper, precinct atrNine Mile was organiaed with Harriapir .fismll, preaident; Chaldea C. Riehy viee.preq-iden- t; Mrs. Harrison Ruaaell, secretary, with .H.. E. Iiabnhee, Myron A. Lr ThompRussell, Ubarle Rusaell, ' son, ' Neil 'Hanka and William Girith-er- s . d, H ' leornmittoemea. these Meetings are ealled for all-o- f places and J. F. MacKnight, eonnty dimeter, whopaaiated .in the oganiu-tiostates that mneh enthnumsm prevails and. some, effective work in distributing literature ia being done, 0 Priee this, year The luckiest man-iia the one who hasn t any daughters and whose wife, got a new eoat last n, publican congressmen, Leatherwood and Colton, who have for yean served the state and the nation wiht credit and honor. Finally republican voters eannot . discharge their full obligations to the season. party and to the state by voting for Fountain pens a dollar up.' The Sun. Hoover and Curtis, and by electing J. REUBEN CLARK WRITES TO CHAIRMAN MARCU8EN . ISmall Shaped Hats $ . . United State e, ce HERBERT C. HOOVER - Vice President . . ., -- con-gram- CpiiTOK, a. o. 11 LUTmveoD Par Saaratary at Otata jodm m. ivrcu Pat Attmrmmj fieiaal Senator King voted. again the Emergency Tariff Bill (H. R. 15275) in poring duties apes certain agricultural producer to meet reseat cmcxgmcia, to provide KvenVc, and for other pnrpoaei, is recorded oa page 3461 of the Congnaaional Record for February 16,1921. He aim voted sgaiust the Conference Report oa the bill, sa will be found on pap 4279 of the Congressional Record for February 21, 1921. "Xi. Caaciaaanao- lat MrWeWeT DOM. er r - the: MghflHt 1 er ership . fA wwvwwwwwwvwvwwyvwwwvwu Bessie Kennedy, Miieeiy, Price, Utah k Urging support for the republican state and national tickets, J. Reuben Four Year Oommisaioner Clark, Jr., undersecretary of state, 8AM WOODHEAD D. C., has written a letr Washington, Two Yeara. Commimioner ter to Carl R. Marcusen, republican HYRUM LARSEN , state chairman, expressing regret over' County Attorney his inability to eome to hia home state C.D. POPE to take part in the last weeks of the Representatives PETTIT campaign. Until a few days ago) Mr. J. ANDERSON W. Clark thought it possible for him to return to Utah to aid in Tallin up (Political Advertisement). big majorities for all G.O.P. candidates, hut hia proposed trip waa can' Wxttia In Southern Utah. celled when Secretary Frank B. Kelstate made it imAccompanied by W. W, Seegmiller, logg said affairs of vice chairman of the republican state possible for the undersecretary "to leave Washington. eommittecj William )L Wattia, repubThe undersecretary makes a special lican nominee for governor left yesfor the election of Utahs repubplea terday for a tour of the Southern part of Utah. The itinerary include! Sa- lican eongresaional candidates and for canline, Richfield, Marysvale, Milford, William IL Wattia, republican wa Mr. Clark for didate governor. 1aragonah, Parowan, Cedar City, SL nominathe for defeated republican MinGeorge, Pahgniteh, Toquerville, er viile, Beaver, Fillmore, Eureka, Re- tion for United States senator, yet support for Ernest pin, Delta, Santaquin, Payson, Span- ernestly urges The undersecretary a letBamberger. ish Fork, Snringville and Provo. Chairman Marcusen, was in to Mr. Wattia, Monday addressed a ter follows: aa part large crowd of employes at the Salt Aa you will remember, I tried to Lake railroad shops and in the evento the convention just after express ing spoke nt a big republican rally the nomination of Mr. Bamlireger, my hold in LeGrande ward chapeL Ernto the est Bamberger, candidate for senator Hentiments with reference which should be taken at the and E. 0. Lentherwood, republican members of i nominee to eongrew, election this fall by theAs recall for I it, the party. republican also spoke nt the evening meeting. I stated at that time that, aa a deBoy only get to be abont 18 yean feated candidate for nomination, I wished to aay that the pary waa bigh old when they find that a ean get along without money about ger than any man in it, and the welfare of the state and of. the nation like flivver can ran without gas. CARBON COUNTY TICKET 3VbUlfevMlOAaief . Holds the heat in the oven Uses less, fuel- .- aa love-matc- -- Ernest-Bamberge- . - . ... . Predicting a republican landslide in own state, ,Unitcd .States Senator John JTooma, oX Jdako, .who Warfin Salt Lake 'City reecntly declared a him'-to survey bf conditions in Utah led believe that this state, too, will roll up. big majorities for both tbe 'Atate and uational ticket. lie. was.miieh inerested in th1 candidacy, of for 'the senate. I have' known ' Mr. Bamberger Senator Thomas said, many years lie and I served together aa national eommittoemen- - from. our. respective states- - L know- him to he a itixen of book ia being printed bart Hoover's acceptance address, the. Mri cultural plank of the .Kansas City pbtform and. other pertinent data relative to the .farm situation. lu addition to this, there b a recital ' of the Republican partya cb inductive 'Of behalf In agriculture bglibtloh elude 1920, a provision Intended . to show that 'the - promise now being made to' tha farmers by Mr. Hoover and Senator Cur Us spring - from a sympathetic atUtnde and therefore wlH be. fulfilled In, good, faith by tha' Republicans. Tha problems of agriculture are' treated from an economic rather than a poUUcal viewpoint, and emphaab b bid oa tha freedom from economic falbctee of the.agrlcultural leglsbtlon a already passed by Republican which includes 14 measures luce March, 192T. ,:; i "Republican leglabtlon In behalf of haa been agricultural . producers form ubted with n vbw of lta having permanent . value, and being founded in sound political economy and good senae, says the textbook. ?The control of every Republican Congress haa been In th hands of those repre' senting agricultural constituencies. So It has been logical and Inevitable that the Interests of agrloulture hnvo been by the. Republican party. Loan Banks AMi Farmers p, i .,t ft, Since 1921 there har.heen midi aralbble to agriculturnl borrowers under Republican admlnfotnitioni n total of 12,774,198,040, chiefly through tho federal form loan banks, the' Joint the intermedbto j stock bhd banka, credit banka and the war finance cor-- I poratlon. This recapltaJation does not ; take Into. account each organisation j nil the' Agricultural Credit Corporation, organised In 1924 to relieve an agri-.cultural crisis In the northritri,' nor I the development of federal warahona-ln- g aa an aid to marketing under tho amended Federal Warehousing Act . In tha asms perlod, under a can tariff which protects ..mon agricultural products than any ln hbtory, tha form price of wheat haa Increased 2 per cant) rye, 20 per cent; corn, 70 per centuoata, 80 per cant; bailey, 00 per cent; 'flaxseed, $7 per cent; beef cattle, SO per cent; calves. So per cent; batter, IS per cent; hogs, IS per cent; sheep, SO per cent; Iambs, 72V4 per cent; wool, 100 per cent ' The fallacy of arbitrary methods for fomnlng tha spread Mtwean the producer and' tha ultimate consumer, each aa are advocated fly tha 102 Democratic plntform, b pointed. They would necessarily remit In price-fixinand Inevitably tha 19,000,000 non-- , agricultural consumers would bo fixing tho pries they desired to pay tho 28,000,000 agrlculutral producers. "Such a proposal b abhorrent to the spirit of American Institutions, aays the textbook. "It b the very essence of state socialism ' In that It would completely eliminate the element of Individual Initiative and enterprise with their commensurate reward." Hr. Hoover's suggestions tor the. Improvement of tha farm situation era reviewed, particularly tha emphasis ha haa bid upon tha need for development of the home market, rather than experimental attempts to Increase shipments of our agricultural products to foreign countries. - hi la lnifolmonts of wblcb tha flrat Is devoted entirely to agriculture, and includes pertinent extracts from Her. - tiie congressional ticket. They must plao,' if Utah is', to function in' the highest interests of the people of the state, elect a full state ticket from Governor Wattia down to the last man named on the ticket. ,,v I earnestly urge the' republican of Utah to vote for those who are candidate of the republican party. With every personal good wish, I am, J. Reuben Faihtf(illy your, (Signed) ' , Clark, Jr, ... URGES ELECTION OF SENATOR 7 ERNEST BAMBERGER . ca .In the 4wdve'yaii the Democratic' , PAGE THMfS, HUE SI AT. " - t ;; ?:,K . n j GJfUbge'' THE tAKf CHIBF Round;Oafc:, -- . - ROtTND1 THB WALLS TO BOILER IRON RANGB.'AU 3 THIGKNBSSBS . - ini, 1 i. Inner Wall; Middle Outer Wall: rw(iHXw T.Tj . ..M HOLDS HEAT .IN;;THE OVEN ' - "The purpose of the asbestos or Uuu-'- -' eral wool ia to retain the heat in : the : oven, WHERE YOU WANT We know there is twice as much of this mineral wool used in tho Boiler Iron Chief as in any other high grade range on the market. rr; I - J 9 mi min i, ifccrs iqmlly 6 wim ns S hniaaft la-r- -t I rtilitnrnsM fworably laSimca jmwJadaoa to ! vt than Chief Raann. IL STEVENSON LUMBER COMPANY Phones 111 and 26 202 West Main St. . Price. Utah, |