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Show PAGE THE. BUN. PRICE, UTAH rovx, By Sna IniOk. i Bmj Thursday B. W. GTOckstt, (lac). Publishing law. Am btand Jana 1915, r Hecond-ClaMail Matter, At tha Poatoffira At 4, Price. Utah, Under tha Act of March ss S, 1879. ADVKKTI8ING RATK8 Display Matter Pur lach Par Iasua, 40c, TraiuuroL 60c. Special Position, 25 par Cent Additional. Tea Grata tha Lina Back Inaar-tto-n. Count Six Words ta Line Sunn Legal Fifteen Onto the Una Each Insertion. Count Six Words to the Lino. Blackface Type Twenty-Fir- e (25) Grate Each Insertion. Obituaries, Garda of Thanks, Resolutions, Bta, At Reading Notice Ratal. Count Six Words to tha Lina. Per Sato, For Rent, Pound, Loot, Etc., Two Cents Per Word Each Issue. No Charge Accounts. Address All Oomataaicatioao to SUN PUBLISHING COMPANY Pries, Utah Bandera nod morning I without The Baa; I Twenty Years Ago This Present Week Dr. IL B. Ooetxman was a Salt Lake City visitor during the week. CL IL Stevenson had returned home from a business trip to Colorado. Oliver T. Harmon returned to Price during the week from a twenty-fou- r months' mission in Missouri. Misses Jessie and Thelma Fouts had returned home from a two weeks' visit in Salt Lake City and Ogden. Mr. and Mrs. Edwin C. Lee were in during the week from their Nine Mile home to do some shopping and attend the celebration. George Fausett was able to be up and around with the aid of a eruteh after his accident on the Fourth in which he had his hip dislocated. Mrs. A. A. Sweet and children from Salt Lake City arrived in Price dur-inthe week on a visit with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Wade. Mrs. J. W. ILoofbourow and daughter, Miss Ruth, were to leave the latter part of the week for a pleasure trip of some duration in California. The Wilson cafe was the name of a new place opened up by Charles Averill and company in the east room of the new James building on Main street The Carnegie museum was taking steps to patent the land around the famous Jensen dinosaur quarry. The quarry is the richest fossil field in the world. Clyde Jackson, cashier of the Helper State bank, was in jail in Price as a' result of. disclosures that a considerable shortage existed in the accounts pf the bank. Will Braffet was hero during the week, from Salt Lake City on business. Braffet was connected with The Salt Lake Tribune and Telegram legal department and had a good position. Pace k Tingley'a nrw eleven hundred dollar liearse was expected to arrive in Price for use in their undertaking parlors here. The vehicle MISjhe finest ever brought to eastern Utah. Miss Ida Paee had just finished taking the school census of Price. There were two hundred and forty-eiggirls and two hundred and fifty ht buys the of school age, an inereaxe over 1P11 census, iiilam Forrester was here from Black Hawk during the week to meet Mrs. Forrester. Forrester and the ohildrrn, who panic in ou No. 5 from Colorado KpriAfi, WPVo to lnhkc their home at the eoal camp. Alfred Smith of Alta was here during the week visiting at the home of his daughter, Mrs. Alfred Perkins. Smith at ono time conducted the Clarke hotel in Price and was amazed at the growth of thu city. Kid" Davis and wife were over from Cleveland to attend the celebration on the Twenty-FourtDavis said it seemed good to be able to attend a celebration aud not hare to fight. He was an interested spectator at tho THA TS Looking Backward" Ukum. tha Year la Idrama, Inbaeription, Offie l'hono No. , Umidcnca, U8-- EVERT THURSDAY By JOHN A. CROCKETT follows: We have often heard of the hardships endured bjr travelers through snow storms, and in fact, have bad some experience with snow in a prairie country, but not until last week were we brought to fully appreciate the position of one attempting to nuke a trip over the mountains in the winter time and during one of the heaviest snow storms that had ever been known to the people of Utah sinee its settlement. On the trip out to Aaliley Valley we noticed that snow began near the entrance to Soldier Canyon and increased in volume up through Whitmore park, gradually decreasing in amount on the other side of the range, there being bat little snow two miles down Nine Mile canyon. On our return to Brocks Tuesday morning, after a few daya sojourn in Ashley Valley, we ascertained that we were snow-boun- d in Nine Mile eanyon, as snow had been falling for several anmmit. and tha north-boun- d on the stage, driven by Orson Bar-lodays and due at Brock's Monday evening, had not yet arrived. Mr. Francis, owner of the Brock ranch, was expected on the stage, and as he is one of the old mountaineers of Utah, his failure to reach home lent weight to the belief that tha summit was impasaable. On Thursday, your humble servant earns to the conclusion that he would give a small exhibition of his nerve by making the trip over the summit on snowshoes, just to show the people what ha could do; and procured the services of Hank Stewart, one of Lunts cowboys, in making the hoes. At this time wc had gone as far np the canyon as Taylors ranch, and had started from there with a team to where tho deep snow commenced, intending to just fairly sail over the summit on our new shoes. Well, we didnt rail over as easy as we anticipated and returned that night to Taylors ranch, where we remained until Saturday without news from tha outside world,, the telegraph line being down when the mail carrier, Mr. Barlow, arrived. He informed Ed Lee, one of the proprietors of Taylors ranch that one of the stage teams was snowed in on the anmmit, and had been there since the preceding Sunday night, then almost a week, without food or water. 'In the morning Mr. Lee collected all of tha available men in the canyon and started for the summit to rescue the horses, there being in the party ten men and six horses. Lee proved himself equal to the emergency and we are rather of the opinion that any undertaking he tackles in the future will be accomplished, unless there are pretty good reasons for failure. The editor of The Telegraph accompanied the expedition and this time did rail with a vengenre from the baek of Hank Stewart s backing broneho, landing in a rather undignified aud humiliating position in about three feet of snow. We eould sit the snow bank all right but not the broncho. The failure to ride anow shoes followed by the futile attempt to ride even a horse, proved beyond question that we ware a tenderfoot. Stewart mounted the broncho, which, hod by one little jerk so nearly broken ns in two, and also came to the ground; not discouraged a particle, however, he again mounted the irate and determined-not-to-be-riddanimal and without a saddle stuck to his baek for five minutea or more, the broneho the while bucking and pitching and Anally landed headlong in a ditch that had been Ailed with snpw some place down the eanyon between ns and Taylors ranch. Stewarts effort, however, proved him to be a master horseman, as he did not leave the animal bark nntil it fell. As to ourself, thi same compliment would hardly be in place, at least until we have had more practice, which will likely be deferred until next winter when the snow is deep, and nice soft places may be found to light in. Without further adventure we arrived at the summit where we found the stage horses, and after digging passage through two hundred and fifty feet of snow, we gut them safely to our traiL That evening with Mr. Barlow, we arrived at the stngo station in Soldier Canyon and tho following morning came to Price. en BAD TURN TO BE ELIMINATED Pioneer Day Celebrated By Hiawatha Loan Suggested For New Project i Alden Bowen CARPENTER WORK A SPECIALTY 131 E. 3rd No. PhouS17J PRICE. UTAH ct ut n WHATS WRONG AND WHERE? TAX FREE PRICES 20 for your old tires. tires and tubes. E?r cent allwance We high-speWe mu. move!hpl at once FlrSstone . sale and are in our history, Thursday, Friday and putting on the greatest Saturday, July 28, 29 and 30. vourScarewihe.hrea.tIst opportunity you have ever had ,0f a" lds SinS over-SSua- ht Cd bv, id k r. safetTLrgerpelfandVnlre of gumld i ppi ngd'rec? extra rordT "ted construction features treadunder a half below Sunnyside was destroyed by fire one day during the week, "the building and contents living a total loss. The origin of the fire was sup-- j Kiecd to have been from a defer live flue, the flames were under sueh head-wa- y when discovered that nothing c j such unbeHevablyMow3 prices!' Y" was raved. these real tires at Most people could make up an excellent list of best books they have never read. ,he - may neVer again buy tireS thes?Sfto0p,4nwffiLl THEYLASTf S 8hrewd people never sign a document before reading it, and seldom sign it aftenrard. Try Tbs Sun for job printing. ta Smoke-Abateme- Serious contamination of Price river, resulting from sewage diqtosit, had been reported to Dr. T. R. Beatty, secretary of the state hoard of health, from Wellington and Woodside. The complaints alleged that the contamination was of a serious uature and was endangering the healLh of both towns and surrounding enmmunitiy. Prod Paternosters mercantile establishment situated about a mile and clothes. J ht e fight. When girls of a Nebraska high school complained that the class rooms were chilly, so in none made the ridiculous suggestion that they wear more ANNOUNCEMDT The Run has been authsrfasl Is Die candidacy at Arthur 8. Has The Emery commissioners have re- nouora ejr of Price for the Republican state ton for esuatjr attorney at Cartes cently purchased about three-fourtof an acre of ground from Andrew y. Anderson, thrgp miles north of HuntLegal blanks of all kinds The 8u ington for the purpose of reducing the box twist turn, just south of Cedar Creek, crossing the north ditch to a 6 per cent curve. The curve now is Engineer very abrupt aud when finished will MASTER CONTRACTOR ABB be much safer. BUILDER ALL KINDS 01 Pioneer day was celebrated by the citizens of Hiawatha and visitors on July 26th. A baseball game between the married and single men was the forenoon attraction. An appropriate Pioneer day program followed and an old time barbecue was served to 1000 persons in the afternoon. Dancing in the evening closed the events of the day. The celebration was afKHiaorcd by In a recent Rhode Island election, the Hiawatha Welfare association, the one voter voted for and against evHiawatha town board and the United ery candidate and every question on States Fuel company. the ballot. will the finance its industry easily S. na n expansion. Save this great state resource for the people of Utah and its many bene(Continued From Page One) fits, nut for Wall Street and its coromie conditions then existing the oil pulent bankers. and engineering refrom coal industry eould not compete. Our economic condition are very ports prepared during the past year favorable for sueh an industry as will at the University of Utah, also the be readily recognized from considera- report by Dean IL B. Ketehum for committion of tha price of imported petrol- the Joint eum and natural gas on the one hand, tee, will give further proof of the aud the credits such an industry could timeliness and commercial desirability realize from the power of this veiy beneficial industry in and smokeless fuel so badly needisl Utah. by our cities. It is easy lo show that It seemr that ereaiion generally our eoal industry ean soon he expanded to twice its present rixe if this have better memories than debtors. industry is now started under the aid An estimated 70 per cent of manuOffered hv the federal government for foM in the United States factur'd rtt1 purple of rcectablirhirg iiiiav-tri- is ing" homes. ucd normality. This impetus by the good graces of the federal governEvery Urge ship in the United benefits to States fleet will hare talking pictures ment will have multi-fol- d the public of Utah, and thereafter in the near future. U. POLITICAL NBAS HUNTINGTON h. n tha t H In the issue of March 5, 1891 of The Telegraph the editor of that paper tells of an eventful trip to the Ashley Valley country. The story AV Grrmain-ltcga- JPlT Deluxe Super Service Station Hew good arc you at finding mlatakraT The artist has Intentionally made several obvious ones In. drawing tho above picture. Some of thorn are easily discovered, other may ba hard. See how long It will taka YOU to find them. SOLUTIONS TO PICTURE ON PA?t? EIGHT Johnson & Vaught, Props. PRICE. UTAH a u hi to |