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Show .. THURSDAY. PAGE rOTJK Poind thi Ymr In Adranrc. iMfliw l'liuiia Ni. 0, Ucaidenat, 133-r 13U. uborriptloo, (2.00 stored At Second Claw Mail Matter, one 4, 1913, At tha Poatoffiee At Price, Utah, Under tha Act of March 8, 187V. ADVERTISING RATES Dinlar Matter Per Inch Per liana, 40c, Transient, BUe. Sjiecial Poaition, 23 per Cast Additional. Leaale Ten Centa tha Lina Each Inner-tion- . Count Six Words to Lina. (12.00 ; Water Application, Proof, $10. Baadara Fifteen Centa tha Line Each Insertion. Count Six Worda to the Line. Illachfaco Type Twentjr-Pir- a (23) Centa Each lnaertion. Obituaries, Carda of Thanks, Resolutions, Etc, At Keadinit Notice Ua tea. Count Six worda to the Line. Ear Bala, For Rant, Found, Loot, Etc., Two Centa Per Word Each laaue. No Sum-Bum- a, al Charge Accounts. Addreaa All Goinmuniratlona to SUN PUBLISHING COMPANY Price, Utah I want warning witheut Tha Sun; I ataad ap and cried la tha congregation :. Ah YOUTH AND SCHOOL While the economists and prophets are scrambling over themselves looking for corners around which Dame Prosperity is said to be loitering, the calendar reminds us all that this is September, the month when school starts. It brings its opportunities. Chief of them is encouraging and making it possible for boys and girls to take advantage of the best means our civilization has yet devised for developing responsible and capable men and women schools. It is hardly necessary to marshall statistics to make the point that few jobs are available and the idleness is a prolific source of juvenile delinquency. Equally obvious is the fact that, with many adults out of work, it becomes socially desirable that the training period of boys and girls be lengthened. Very important, at this time, is the personal counseling of youths with their understanding elders. The teen age is the age, and no man is a greater hero to a boy than he who, successful in his own business or profession, takes a sincere and intelligent interest in the youngsters welfare. That needs but to be tried to be hero-worsh- ip LOOKING BACKWARD ft t K H! is a part of human nature to look back on other days and compare them with the present. Everybody likes to tell you that they "can remember when. So it generally doesnt do any harm and affords considerable satis- It faction. tt 8 :1 I II We have been doing a little thinking back ourselves. Weve been wondering how many citizens around here can remember when the bicycle built for two was a popular vehicle; or how many can remember the tin-tygallery, the Last Chance saloon, the square danced the medicine show, the dream book, seven-year itch, the sunbonnet, the quill toothpick or the bean poultice? Mighty few of these thing? are left to the new generation. Many can recall the pe ed i l 5! 'jT i 51 I ij candy-pullin- g, the the. potato on coaloil can, congress gaiter shoes, mesquite bar ever the bed and the horsefly. Weve come a long way since the day when these things were common in every community, yet we often wonder if, with all the (! ji ! rs. improvements that have come to replace them, if this generation is any happier than the one that holds all these things in fondest memory. After all, happiness is the biggest thing we get out of life. So if we are no happier now than those who lived in the days of these discarded things, then have we really any room to brag that there about the wonderful progress ply the buying went? good-sizrush. to a be is likely weve made in the past fifty This cannot be met unless more years? normal operations are resumed. WHEN THE RUSH COMES When the demand comes and it is sure to there is bound to be Comforts in homes are far a shortage in many lines. Then lower in price than they have watch prices start going up. been for years. This is partly Those who are wise will condue to unemployment, which is tinue to meet their wants and now being overcome. But much needs in the old orderly fashion. in the Prices are low now, probably of it is due to fear that the general economic lower than they ever will be situation will become worse. In again in the life of this generaplain words, it is due to hoard- tion. Slumps do not come often, and after every recovery maring. Things have a way of wear- kets reach new high levels. The ing out Clothing, housing, ev- wisest part of aaving is spending erything in common use, eventu- for normal needs. Those who are ally will wear out The longer hoarding now are going to be replacement or replenishment is the losers in the long run, for deferred, the sooner that eventu- when they do get around to buyality arrives. When enough peo- - ing theyre going to find prices practice this form of hoard-- much higher than the same arso many will have to sup-- ticles can be purchased for now. FRANK POLITICS ed self-deni- al o The following, taken from the film of the Eastern Utah Advocate of May Iff, 1808, tells of the capture of and killing of Joe Walker and the noiorioua outlaw, "Butch Cassidy: "News reached Price late Friday evening of the killing of the notorious outlaw, Butch Cassidy, and Joe Walker, and the eapture of Schultx and Thompson, members of the Bobbers' Boost gang, by Sheriff Allreds posse which left here on Sunday, May 8. The members of the posse leaving here were Sheriff C. Yf. Allred, Pete Ander son, J. W. Warf, J. M. Whitmore, George Whitmore, Jack Gentry Jim Inglefield, Billy McGnire and Jack Watson. When in the virinity of Lower Crossing (Woodside), Sheriff Allred sent McGuire and Ingle-fie- ld to Lower Crossing with dispatches, Joe Bush of Salt Lake City and a rancher named Coleman of Lower Crossing returned to the posse with McGuire and Inglefield. In the box canyons of the Price river below Lower Crossing, the trail of the outlaws was found. Here also was a hunch of Whitmores rattle which they had stolen and also ono of tho outlaws' horses. "Sheriff Allred detailed members of the posse to drive the cattle hack to the range and join them in Range valley. With the balance of the posso, Sheriff Allred followed the trail north into Range valley where they were told by a rancher that Walker and Cassidy had not been seen. Believing that this information had been given to mislead, Sheriff Allred pressed the rancher into service as a guide, and in a short time were on the trail which leads down Kange valley and crosses the Green river. After crossing the river the entire posse remained in the canyon until nightfall. Sheriff Allred was pretty well satisfied that they were close to the outlaws, and knowing that the latter would have Bomo of their members on the outlobk, deemed it wise to continue under cover of darkness. Led by the rancher, they continued across the hills until about fifteen miles was covered and the vicinity of the rendezvous of the robbers was reached. Here the posse dismounted and, wrapped in their blankets, awaited the approach of dawn. About an hour before daybreak they remounted and preceded to within aixty yards of the sleeping outlaws. Allred then called on them to surrender, as did also rote Anderson and J. M. Whitmore, who told the outlaws that they were surrounded by a hundred men. Cassidy and Walker immediately began firing but the other two threw up their hands and ' begged for mcrey. Cassidy and Walker after emptying their revolvers, started to ran. Walker fell about sixty feet from the bed with a bullet through his head and another pierced his heart Cassidy fell shortly after with a bullet through his heart Tho battle took place in the Book cliffs, shout forty-fiv- e miles north of Thompsons springs. With the dead bodies packed on a couple of hones and with the two captured outlaws, the trip to Thompsons began, which point was reached on Friday morning. "Governor Wells of Utah was notified by wire of the eapture. The party left Thompsons the following morning and reached Price at 7:10 a. m. A big crowd had assembled to view tho remains of the outlaws. At the inquest a large number of witnesses testified as to the identity of tho outlaws, and in accordance with the testimony, tho jurys decision was that the dead bodies were those of Butch Cassidy and Joe Walker. The bodies were prepared for burial on Saturday evening and placed in common wood coffins, and on Sunday buried in the Irice cemetery. "Joe Walker was said to have come from Texas some seven years ago and remained here, doing ranch work and riding the range. Later he went to Huntington where he was employed at Hay Bros. sawmilL Being a good rider and handy with a gun, he was soon again among the During the summer of 1S95 his criminal career began. Under the influence of liquor he attempted to hold up Price, and in some way managed to elude the officers. Fearing arrest in ease he returned to Price, he joined the cattle rustlers who rendezvoused in the eastern part of Emery county and who have fattened off the cattlemen of eastern Utah. Alxmt fifteen months ago on attempt was made by the officials of Carbon and Emery counties to arrest him for horse stealing. In an rneounter with Walker and a pal in the San Rafeal reefs. Sheriff Tuttle of Emery county received a bad gunshot wound in the thigh, supposed to have been inflieted by Walker. Walker hns led gangs in raid after raid on cattle and horses and was much feared by ranchmen. As to the identity of Cassidy there is a great divergence of opinion. Sheriffs Allred and Tuttle, with several others, claim tho body to bn that of Butch Cassidy beyond a question of a douht. Doe Shores of the Denver and Rio Grande Western, a noted criminal hunter, and others are equally positive that it is not Casidy. Time alone will settle the dispute. The two outlaws who surrendered to the posse claim the names of Thompson and Schultz and are possibly Wyoming cattle rustlers. They were lodged in jail at this place under heavy guard. Tlwmiwon and Schultz claim that the dead man said to be Cassidy was known hv them in Wyoming by the name of John Herring. In the event of Sheriff Allreds posce failing to eapture the outlaws, Sheriff Tuttle with a posse from Orangeville was south of the Book eliffs to intercept them. Sheriff Wilson of Grand county was also notified to ent off escape to the southeast, but failed to show up. "The Prico hoys who were in the passe smiled when Joe Rush got his work in on the Salt Lake City reporters. Hoe is smooth of tongue and has a snpmne amount of "unadulterated gall. Buh says the moire was of very short duration. When he dismounted it was just 5 o'clock. The bandits were surrounded after a walk of a hundred yards or more, and tho lmlllu fought six minutes later. The two bandits fired eight or ten shots. Some of the jsisse say the bullets whistled by rloi--c to them, bnt Bush says he wasnt paying any attention to such details of the performance. He was only looking after his own rifle and the bullets in its chamber. The shooting was all dune at a distance of sibout twenty-fiv-e or thirty yards. Members of the pocse say that Bush, 'the brave, did not show up until after Walker and Cassidy had been killed. It is very probable that Bucli was at r. safe distance when he was 'looking after his own rifle and the bullets in its chamber. It is also very likely that Bush was not ns much concerned about the flying bullets as he was to preserve his eouardly hide. The credit for the capture is due solely to the Irieo boys, every ono of whom were at the front pumping lead into the outlaws. Windy Bush is all right in an interview, and the Salt Lake reporters are soft snaps. "Sheriff Ward of Evanston. W.vo., reached Price on Sunday evening for the rnrpose of identifying Cassidy, tho latter having served a term in the Wyoming penitentiary while Vard was warden. On Monday the body of exhumed, and an examination made. When seen by The Advocate reporter. Ward ataled positively that the body was not that of Butch' Cassidy. On Tuesday, Kehultz and Thompson were taken to Castle Dale for a preliminary hearing. They were guarded by a strong jxwe. Jack Gentry, Billy McGuire, Pete Anderson and Jim Inglefield reached Price on Monday with the hand of horses which were found in possession of the outlaws. They reached here with' twenty-fou- r head, fonr having given out on the trip to Price; The band is above the average Utah horse." g, The world must be getting better. A candidate for the senate in one of our western states has announced in his campaign: I want the office the other fellow holds, and thats all there is to it. And in Kentucky another fellow put an ad in the paper paying: I am fifty years aid and have worked hard all my life. I want an easy time for awhile, so I am running for the office of jailer. Please vote for me. And there you have pretty good evidence that the world is getwhen candidates ting better begin to admit that its the job they are thinking of Instead of saving the dear public. Slowe bunk ly but surely, the passed out by politicians is being discarded, and becomes more a matter of bus!- old-tim- office-seekin- g 10c Cake of ZEE In. fc Time, 5 F Canning Wax PRICE DRUG CO. 10c puis 25c PRESCRIPTION SPECIALISTS Specials 25c Caster Oil 75c American Oil 50c Milk of Magnesia (1.00 Russian Oil 25c 25c 25c 85c 60c ...17c 40c ....39c Glycerine Mercurochrome Hinkles Pills Kuschcn Salts Sal Hepatica 79c 23c Mentholatum Vicks Salve Boric Acid Bathing Alcohol (1.00 Maglax 5c Crystal White Soap 60c 75c 25c 50c for 50c White King 18c 17c 19c 42 c 35c KOTEX 8 49c 42 c S9c 17c 39c 79c 23c Powder..37c and H I tlnfi1 T- - Saturday 10c Lux Toilet Soap 3 19c 15c Jergens Soap 2 for ISc 16c 20c Baby Castile 50c Woodburys Oc Shampoo 50c Palmolive Shampoo..39c fn jkiTutt (1.00 Theatrical Cold Cream 60c Mum Cold Cream 60c Odorona 60c Neet I Satt11 ag. . . br VJ junw SOcNonSpi 50c Sunburn Lotion BjU 33, ,Todmy h lc JUNIOR 75c iU Penslar Bond Thrift Certificate Pound 1 Paper ....ft With Each lc 50c Purchase 50c Maglac Toothpaste....33c 50c Pebeco Toothpaste ...,39c 25c Listerine Toothpaste 21c 25c Boraline Toothpaste.. 17c 89c (1.00 Listerine 49c (1.00 Antiseptine 89c (1.00 Hinds Lotion 50c Cucumber Lotion ....39c U- 25c Garden Court Talcum 17c 50c Whisk Broom (1.25 Flytox .".93, 50c Hospital Cotton 29, 50c Pep Cleaner 27c 25c Band-Aids Set Rose Glass Dishes - fen w Via1 fw gibEk1 tlC. jg, (1.50 Cookie Jar. Mi g yttbnd 89c idlhyo S1.49 t ind weN cniM 24-Pie- ce .Hill mkonb THE NEW KITCHEN RANGE SET aM d b. As dr jn giymo Free! Made to Withstand Kitchen fifcO'Be untune A Hand iifier Decorated md Brj China Plate With Each Service Shell Green and Deep Rose Colors for I Btmey Price t adeonrt Purchase of tflndcpc Kitchen Set iSriPf non lifent t Mi V Wtt SPECIAL BT WHILE THEY LAST AT 98c FA Saw ti tb ness. Thats largely because the people have gotten wise to the game, and they are more apt to favor with their vote the fellow who is honest enough to come out flatfooted and admit that all he wants is the job. FUNNY FIGURES the national debt. Maybe thats what makes then bawl so much. Six sacks of cement are produced every year for every person in America. Now we know where brides get the raw material for Iheir first biscuits. This continent, according to statistics, has existed for .10,000 years. That explains some of the cars we see on the highways. And again, science has invented a new type of paper that will stretch like rubber. We wish Uncle Sam would start printing his money on that kind of paper. Some of our readers love figures, so here are a few gathered from a book of statistics sent out by the University of Iowa. It declares the average child knows 2256 words. We suppose that includes Gimme a nickel. By a new English process eggs arc Every child born in the United States is burdened with (200 of kept fresh by coating them with a liquid paint. WHATS WRONG AND WHERE? A North Carolina wmr (tot paps1 cords that a sailor wmM by coming into contact with live wife. Possibly a linotjf error, yet such things hebi pened. A German was arrested swindling through pretending make gold from base metik may be merely a coincidence th he is a plumber. 1 0 Having I can eai An Oklahoma dairyman fidingly advertises: stalled city water, increase the number of w mers for milk. tern a Mil Cretan Imtoni tqrof ibi for Ik first nbli In go until Ir. ind 9 tbe pi Uf-pn- u Tnodn mod Mr. Masters intimates t Lincoln did not wash himself im jy ntn.R ilk As ermuch. Which should make a greater idol of small boys tti ub. M ever. mint N There are more autos than instant comotives, but in this majc the that it doesnt imply is ity always right Archaeologists might gJj a fine collection of fossils aroon Washington without ever ing a After vigorously pressin suit, a young mans suit !tk Kin mao an koa ns Thom iCsA tOrug on 11 PLAN TO REGISTB At tbs U visit tonrl Inrth, I stitution. Ho Freshmen must rf 21 and must attend Sept 22 to Sept. 24. All other students. must register Sept-26- Regular class J .Willii OF UTtf Utahs highest son dard educational m port Sept. T tophi needs pressing. UNIVERSITY 25 vr 27- begins Sept. Send Tor Catalognj University of Salt Lake City It, "M ' pfm Tin. I Nr. 15 I j |