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Show THE 8VX, PRICE. FAjGE TWO Silveir By Nomina List Election Nove J. 8. EDWARDS Cmdilhlt For Stilt Sernltr, la Cor boo County. Unfortunately, tho average citizen -- know but liltla in any country about basis, the daily market priec on the the monetary standura. much leas the j silver certificate of the value that day. circulating medium of exchange they Also stamp out silver day and date at commodity price, ten, twenty-fiv- e, use in money. v In olden timea it waa all barter. fifty cents and one dollar. Price to Then iron waa used at money, then use as a medium of exchange for the decopper, then ailver and thereafter state of Utah, to make up for the gold. As different countriea establish-e- d ficiency of a medium of exchange, themselves in civilization they con- lacking in money to carry on buaineaa ceived governing lawa to apply on in the state. Also sell silver certificates to any value of their mon-;- y their mount to fp-- onr, pn an investment basis, and bring li'w; ; ziliilns'of dollars mtc J5; 6olt pjy in thia United State, darting ailver commodity exchange. with the declaration of our indepen We will hold the silver; Mso get denoe. For some time there waa plento deposit in tha thia cash ty of worry of eatablishing any mon- bank and money hand bur investors a cerey standard. tificate life insurance policy like a .On September 34, 1860, the gold and there is no ehanee to lose at this conspiracy culminated in tha crash of time on silver at the present eommodWall atreet and panic. price an ailver is now selling for Then the financial panic of 1873, ity less than it has for 2000 years. when the United States issued fiat As 30 per cent of all business in the money, in paper money, in denomina- state of Utah ia on a trading and bar. eenta tions of ten, twenty-fiv- e, fifty basis will relieve this condithis ter one dollar and up. Buaineaa waa bad, tion to also, put fifty thousand until 1878 when specie payment! were men in the atate.work twelve months, In resumed in 1879, over tha vote of the besides, put Salt Lake City aa well as president. and In 1880, a ailver' act waa Utah, on the highest investment u UTAH-EVE- RY !C purchase security basis of sny state in the Unipassed, authorizing the purchase of on really put us on the map all over 400,000 ounces of silver monthly. the world. Busin cn was good and we had onr With only eight nations on the gold congress. lint billion-dollleft, and only two of them Then in 1892, Cleveland ealled con- standard of franco and the importance any gress in special session to repeal the United ailver 'purchase aet, and we had the with States anyone with judgment the eommodity security of ster1803 panie. At thia junction, J. P. ling silver as above explained, ean sold United States the Morgan look forward with real confidence to of gold and agreed to protect the fntnre of Utah going over the top, tho gold reserve, and thia agreement and becoming a real financial center BHUt still be in force, as then is no record of thia agreement being can- with the depository in the United silcelled. So onr gold standard still rests States and the state pf Utah, of well aa a money center. as ver, in Wall street, instead of WashingSo the gold standard is located with ton, D. CL;bankers of the UnitWithout sufficient circulation of the international America. ed States of money to earry on the commercial Waineas of the Vnitad 8tates ia on a B. P. W. CLUB VOTES $100 FOB gold standard.. CHILDREN'S BOOKS With the majority of onr industries practically efosed. with twelve million The Price Business and Professional man out of work, owing to the fact Women's elub held its meetthat the gold standard is located in ing Monday at Rinettiregular 6 Capitolo Wall street, I propose to establish restaurant. Mrs. Revs Beek Bo none tha silver standard in Salt Lake City, was the speaker of the evening and open up all tha silver mine mills, smel- she talked on Women In Polities; ters and the coal mines in Carbon Mrs. E. K. Olson gave two vocal numcounty to furnish the fuel for power. bers and Miss Hose Davidson renderBy passing u bill in the state legis- ed a reading. The main feature of the lature and the senate, with the govwas a presentation of $100 ernor's signature, use of the state evening for children's books to the Carnegie treasury for the depositing of sterling library of Price. ailver for the security of, ailver cerAbont the only man who ia willing tificates issued on the sterling silver of from ten cents up to any amount to faee the mnsie these days is an of ailver deposited, on a commodity orchestra leader. ar $65,-000,9- 00 bwcm nut ran -- KHtmiic HERBERT HOOVER For Vice-Preside- nt O Q MRS. C.1. OVERFIELD ROBERT D. YOUNG . . M. O. PACKARD . Viee-Preside- nt . JAMES H. MAURER O' For Presidential Electors CLARENCE NESLEN MRS. I a For Presidential Electors RUBY L. WEBBER GE( NATHANIEL STEIMLE C AN1 ID IDA FOSTER E V.B ED A. W. CLEMONS MRS. W. S. GREENWOOD JOHN F. WELSH I I Z1 MRS. FRANK A. DRURY FRED RICH CO -- For CHARLES CURTIS nm pwnv .. For President NORMAN TUCmaS ' Viee-Preside- nt JOHN N. GARNER For Presidential Electors son For President FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT For President For minim ENC -- For United States Senator For United States Senator I I ELBERT. D. THOMAS I For Cong. Representative, For Cong. Representative, 1st Diat. - EARL M. WEBBER ABE MURDOCK For Secretary of State For Secretary of Stats " I For Attorney General For Attorney General GILBERT L. NANCE JOSEPH CHEZ For State Treasurer For State Treasurer. BERT WESTOVER For State Auditor JULIUS C. ANDERSON For State Auditor WILLIAM T. McCONNELL For State Representative In accord with the general policy of the United Benefit to furnish the best and most modem protection, this policy has been designed. The policy is not an Industrial policy, but furnishes protection and benefits, "Just like Dads. Premium Rates Ae Umfcr S 1 For District Judge For District Attorney For District Attorney F. W. KELLER ' Co. Commissioner, J r. Tern For Co. Commissioner, r. Term For r. Term For Co. Commissioner, r. Term For DR. C. R. FAHRING provides definite insurance protection. developes habits of thrift by furnishing a definite plan of savings. It creates an estate for the child and reimburses the parent in the event of the premature death of the ehild. It provides a definite channel for the express ion of parental love. It protects the child against possible fntnre emhsrase-men- t in not being able to secure insurance protection. It builds for the future and is the safest savings plan yet devised. It ia the connecting link which rounds ont the complete family insurance program. LIFE For District Judge GEORGE CHRISTENSEN It It JUVENILE For State Representative MRS. REVA BECK BOSONE For For Co. Commiiuiioner. Ik EDV For State Senator WALLACE R. WAYMAN WHY YOU SHOULD INSURE YOUR CHILD ABE For Supt. of Publie Instruction GEORGE M. MILLER REASONS I FRANK CONNOR For State Senator . J0H CHARLES A. STAIN For Supt. of Publie Instruction United Benefit Life Insurance Company Omaha I COR ROBERT ADAMSON CHARLES H. SKIDMORE SOME M. A. L. PORTER MILTON H. WELLING In the Foi ROI For Governor For Governor HENRY H. BLOOD START YOUR CHILDS INSURANCE PROGRAM NOW! lit Diet For Juatiee of Supreme Court D. C. DORA For Justice of Supreme Court DAVID W. MOFFAT - JOS JOHN O. WATTERS DAVID L. PARMLEY For County Attorney For County Attorney WALTER C. GEASE CONSTITUTIONAL AM A Joint Resolution proposing an amendment to Section 5, of Article XI of the constitution of the State of Utah, relating to Municipal Corporations. State of Utah, County of Carbon s. I, Elizabeth Hadley, county clerk in and for true and correct list of the nominations filed in my office as appear for national, state hand and seal of said Carbon county this 27th day of October, A. D., 1932. Ma a a s a 7 a Waiver of Premium For an extra premium the Company will furnish a further insurance against the failure of this insurance ' program. This additional insurance provides in event of the death or disability of the parent or whoever is designated ss the Original Benefieiaiy, all future premiums thereafter falling dmv will be waived and tho policy will mature and the values increased as though all premiums had been paid. Detailed Information Without Obligation Will Be Furnished You By Writing L. A. HILLS tags, giving Deer season dosed Sunday evening, and Commissioner Newell B. Cook exthe stats fih pects a huge number of the tag withoffices in the in the next few days as the hunters hunting license get the 1932 season behind them for has surh a tag attached' to he used good. commented Newell B. So far, when the hunter bags his doer, and each hunter so successful in the hunt Cook, commissioner, Monday, about is asked to return the tag to the flute 50 per rent of the deer killed have fish and game department, whewit been under three years of age, and will he used for compiling statistics the other half have been three or ovwhich will serve as a guide in the er. All hunters, practically without management of the states hunting exception, report their deer aa in 'exresources in future year. Possibly 10 per cent of the success- cellent' condition, 'good, 'fat' or ful hunters reporting to the eapitol otherwise satisfactozy. ' office to date have been women. Little did our grandparents think No tags at all have been received from the cheeking stations on Beaver that the day wonld ever eome when mountain and on the Dixie forest, the member of the younger generation would feel their corn more than where the information is being they feel their oats. as to the deer killed,turned by hunters .to and game department eapitol to date. Each have been re- 1 Resident Agent No. 6, Olson Flats Deer Season Was Generally Successful For Most Twenty -- Three Carbon Students Attending Hunters; Condition of Bucks Excellent University of Utah information About 325 Price, Utah Christensen, Beth Crawford, Frank Javier Gonl, Ross Hardy, Bill Mao-Knigh- t, B. Han- Mary Rnggeri, Frank son. Emmanuel Stein of Price; Fred J. Bosone, Omar B. Bunncl. John Orris Vieta, Ida Wilson of Helper; Tony Twenty-thre- e student registering Saracino, Frank V. Colombo, John Gori-she- k, from Carbon county are enrolled as Rums of Sunnyside; Frank J- Wh resident students at the Edward William Gorishek, University (f Bur-res- s Utah for the present terns, Ion, Jr. of Scofield; Leland Q according Lloyd, Gertruda Castle of the figures furnished Gate; by Miss Jeanne Robert CL Woodhead of Kenilworth; M. Home, assistant recorder of the Eileen of Latuda. Sehults faculties. The tola number of resi-leMeagher students is 3171; of this number 1!U arc men and 1210 are women. FUNERAL SERVICES HELD FOB Registration by schools is as folAGED ELMO RESIDENT lows; Graduate division, 127, an of thirty over last Funeral servieea were conducted year; arts nd sciences, (523; education, 037; Tuesday afternoon at Elmo under th direction of tho Wallace Mortuary 343; luminous, 367; lower William II. Sanderson, 70, who died nt se I;!" wth (finding allfrcahmen 'I' there last Sunday. He is tho father of Mrs. Jobs n.n',rnnK) 744. wife of Bishop Alger of Mm tj?rln wunty student! in resi-- Mr. Sanderson has resided ut Elm ,ut ttniv"y. with for the past seventeen year, p11 home towns are: Florence E engaged in farming and stockraisuifr jJif IT in the school of mines and Al-ge- r, |