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f If TSS' TV- -? -- ,rt , x-bsb- BBv, lW rflfl fl I J w,"s x nl fcr SECTION. I PAGES 1 TO 8 1 I Eastern UtaM Advocate 1 B A NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED FOFUJ3PLE NOW ON EARTH. i J . ""ly f"" KB ". UTAH. TlinWIlAY,r-m' 12, 1012. X0MI1KII no. J fl Br-- 18ImV-' AW m finds mm it Bitor..s ok i:.miii:7..i,i BBuAINST Bl'ltVKYOIt. flfljtitttcc Ho Clnlin-j to Ilno PMulio Haw Him Turn tint HBbur to Connor County PBu- Hnjilri Oilier Alleged flflfe MUtnku of Forvniiiii. PBn return front Suit I-ako BBtondny, County Hurvcyor BflFrurncr was nrrostod upon PBits charging him with tho PBcttt of public moneys. PBtho sum of .fifty-two dol HM complnlnant bolng Lars flB of Price Tho second Is BMby Harmon C Hrynor, a flKt thin city nlso, nnd nl flBcmbcxxlomcnt ' ftovonty BBrs. Tho dato of tho nl BBio In (ho first warrant Is December 23, 1911, and ond tho 30th of June, t has to do with polltax -r to him by Polltax Col I cock of Spring aion pro- tlio second Is In connec- tho expondlturo of ntato Is. Tumor's hearing on r complaint was to havo ro Justlco Halllnger yes it C Stanley I'rlcc, his nt s taken a chango of vottuo Filch' court at Helper. tnnlntalns that ho turned x money over to County Snyder, nnd thai ho has to tho transaction. In r of tho slnto road trans d difference nltogod In tho Is purely a ratstnko on )f a foreman on tho work long slnco mode- good, jland and C. H. Htovenson r" bondsmon. Tho frlonds Died nro not yet ready to lot guilty, some going so My It Is simply n "putup political reasons. It CHUMJK MAUI. ;.i.nst ijwiIjYm' joxin i Jones, formerly county d accused of umboxxllng cunly funds, was charged A count last Saturday In n worn out by II. (.'. llryner, 1 I' n count was on an nl Iprojrlntlou of u check hundred dollars, Jones re I'rlro Snturdny from lllnok hero himself nnd fnmlly ii vl !'lng with Mr. and Mrs KorrrsUr, old time friends trttk nnd Cnstlo Onto. dnl hii)ilcr Wiirrntil. )i,:i also sworn to a war ring Former County Troas tier ultli omlxiKloinont on o' June, 1012, but the I not stated. Bnydor was 1 before Justlco llalllngor lay and hU bonds fixed nt nil dollars. This make tho to no far ngnlnst Snyder. .V'jihmI to go on his own ncu Hint ho might got out M(. for bondsmon. Andersonf& Co., tho clo mvo causod a warrant to bo u Jubtlco IiallUtgor's court W Haley, who obtained a r'oflin from that firm on n hrck of twcnty-nlno dollars. IM)V KXCCItHlON IS Itl'X TO HIAWATHA y afternoon a froo excursion ' to Hiawatha by tlio C'astlo railroad people, whoro n ImII was wltnoKMsl between " Unit railway employes and from tho initios. Uetwoon 'lie am n hundred took nd f the freo trip. Tho gumo :od one from tho start, ton owing to be played to do ' championship. In tho ninth ' was twelvo (o twelve tyid the mlno boys got throe king fifteen to twelvo for '"or Tho afternoon was chilly, but othorwlso tho enjoyed Its outing vory 'T Next Sunday an oxcur 1 to run to Mohrland, whore of ball will bo played. 'tan Construction company, I tho now nllroad from to Illack Hawk, want la Wl nation mon. Thoy nro top wagea with steady work " winter, 1 Manks, over throo hundred " tock. Advocato Publish- ' Want Ails (let Ile-mltx. A SUMMER TRAGEDY. fr" PROGRESSIVES CONVINE; PLATFORM VERY PLAIN Carbon county progressives held tl.elr convention nt Prlco Inst Tuoa dny afternoon. C. II. Stevenson, acting chnlrmnn of tho party, called the tontcutfon to order, whllo John Potter1 :m'odwUio posftlphf iofrSS tnry. A. Ilalllngcr, III K'Hnnnoh .ind $am Stoln wero named by tho cjislr ns n commtttt on credentials. I. iKht of the thirteen precincts of the county wore uu rep rot Med by delegates. Those wero Winter Quar ter. Scoflelil, Costtu dale, Kenll .orth, Clnr Creek, Harper, Spring (leu and Hiawatha. The crciloiilliilit committee was the first to report. Helper wits rep resented by I). Ilcrgcra and Sam riteln; Price, John Potter und A. Ilalllngcr, proxy for C. Stanley Price; Wellington, II. F. Hansen and M, A. Draper; Sumi)slde, Jo seph It. Sharp and (leorge N, Hill; Cnrboutllle, .Matt Wnmer. Nino delegates In all, out of seventeen entitled to seals, from tho thirteen products of tho county. Then tho committees ou ordor of buslncM nnd platform wero named and they took fifteen minutes recess to report The platform committee was com posed or J. It. Sharp, D. Ilorgora and M. A. Draper; order of business, A. Ilalllnger, Ueorgo N. Hill nnd Malt Warner. Tlio pl.it form us printed below was drafted by J. It. Sharp, nnd after bolng rend to tho convention, was adopted without a dissenting oto. It was offored by Ueorgo N. Hill and seconded by Sam Stelu. It reads: Tim Platform Ailnptttl. The progressUe party of Carbon county, In convention assembled, concodo to tho democrats uvorythlng of accomplishment t'utt mukes up our nation's history irom 1770 to 1800 a history that has dUoredlt od tho further spread of monarchy, and that has fostered the freo re public In tho untenanted continents, of this world. Wo concede to tho republicans everything of accomplishment in our nation's hUtory that stop by Btop has lifted us from tho demo cratic simplicity of 1800 to our world's commerclul sovereignty of 1912. Tho domoorntlc party has glvon us a Washington and a Jeffer son. Tho republican party has given us a Itookefellor and a Morgan. Tho people now domand that fcomo part of tho glory of tho first and of tho wealth of the socond bo moro liber ally shared with tho one hundred million -cltliens who havo mado pos sible tho existence of both. In tho call of tho progressive party wo boo tho promise of that domand. In Its platform wo rocog ntro tho means of Its accomplish ment, and wo hall as their standard bearer, Theodore Iloosovelt, out of whose battles for tho "squaro deal" our causo Is already nearly won. We especially commend that plank In tho progressiva platform which promises us tho Industrial commission clothed with power to grip tho middleman, who bars tho duorot ilioinanufucturorilflfclb. buyer of lits wares. And we es pecial fy furthor commond that plank which declares that lo dlssolvo tho unholy nlllanco between, corrupt business nnd corrupt politics Is tho first task of the statesmanship of today. Wo belloto that tho railway pnss and tho corporation gift to a gov ernment official Is tho first step to wards that unholy alliance, mid wo hero nnd now pledge ourselves to nominate no candidate to office In Carbon county who will accept such railroad pass or such corporation gift. Willi pride equal to that of n re publican or a democrat wo point to tho grtsit and small corporations of our county, nnd with equal hopo wo barken to tho cull with which our Inexhaustible resources are beckon ing to untold corporations yet to come, and w epromUo each corpora tion hero and yet to como tho equal good will of our party If our pres ent laws and rules are Insufficient for tho growth and fostering of our corporations, wo iromlsu them more and better rules and laws to that end. Wo regard tho property rights of our corporations us sacred as those of tho people, nnd wo will overlook no consideration for both that come within tho law. Wo claim that tho people of Car bon county can look to tho welfare .if her corporations with moro Jus lleo ami disinterestedness than can tho paid agenta of thoso corpora tions, and wo pledge ourselves so to do. Wo accept In Its entirety tho plat form of tho progressive party of tho United States, and wo pledge tho people n Just and honest administra tion of its county nffulrs. Tlio Ticket 1h Named. After tho platform was out of tho way it was proposed that a recess of thirty minutes bo taken to cau cus on a tkkot. The motion pre vailed, but It was moro than an hour und a halt before tho officers of tho convention and the delegates returned. When (hoy did A. Ilal llnger announced to tho convention and the spectators that au agree ment had been reached and that It was tho plan to name tho lcket as a whole, Instead of making nomina tions singly, and going through tho monotony of placing oach candldato boforo tho body as a whole and sec onding nominations and balloting, Tho party was progressive In this, as well as In other things, said t)io speaker and would dlvorgo from old oustoms. "Wo havo u slato, pre- (Contlnuod on pago four) mm of i in:i,t)'i phici: lasr hatch . I'rkfXO SUNDAY. Ilortdr- (Iho Homo Tlmrly AiHIco mill C4iuiiM'l 1'nlks Ity lllftiiop and Otlirn Inrtre ttrniliinro. The Carbon stake quarterly con ferenco was held at Price, Septem ber 7 and 8, 1912, tho first solution commencing nt 2 o'clock Saturday afternoon. There was In nttondnnco the stnko prosldenoy, nine members of tho high council and two niter nates, a majority of tho bishops of the wards and nil the president of the auxiliary organizations, Klder J. Golden Kimball of tho first council of sevotttles nnd a goodly number of Saints from nearby wards. Presldont Klmbnll, (Justnvo A. hereon nnd Arthur W. Horsluy of fered some cry timely counsel nnd ndtleo to tho Snlnts, giving many Il lustrations of things existing nnd the remedy to overcome thoso thut am not or an uplUtlng nature and asked tho Saints to put forth a uni ted effort to bring about a better ordor of things. Other 4pcakers at tho conference wero Illshop Samuel Dugmoro, Dish op John W. Hill, Klders Semon J. Uoldlng, Franklin Irvln Itowley, Talkot I). Kves, Arthur S. More-ley, John S. MathU, Oliver T. Harmon and Ixivi II. Pace, all sotting forth tho beauties of tho gospel, and on cnurnglng tho Saints to so Iho that the blessings of tho Lord may bo upon Uiem continually. Commendations were made of the efforts put forth in tho building of the stako tabernacle und till urged tho BalnU to bo gonorous with their moans, so It may bo completed us soon us poHslble. A good spirit was manifested in all the sessions of? tho conference and tho congregation llstonod with Interost to tho re marks as they wero madu by the spoakers. Tho primary stake and ward offi cers held tltolr regular meeting at 4 o'clock Saturday afternoon. Tho stako priesthood mooting was hold Saturday evonlng, und tho Mutuals conference Sunday ovenlng with a good attendance. A. U, Apportion, superintendent or tho Utuh lines of tho Donver and Ilto Orande, said last Monday at Salt Lako City: "Work on tjio Im provements of our road in this stato Is bolng rushed through In good shape. They are laying steel tracks oust of Castle date this way and huvo a mllo and a half to two miles of it In placo by now. In foot half of tho Improvements are finished by this tltno." UTAH COAL ROAD I LETS CONTRACT 1 Utah Construction Company to Build Twenty- I Eight Miles of Railroad From Mohrland to ; i Point Half Way Between Helper and Castle II Gate Beyond There the Survey Is Unde- ; 1 cided Upon For a San Pedro Connection. I During the past week tho Utah Coal Itallroad company of which W. O. Sharp Is president nnd which Is owned by United States Smelting, Mining and Hoflnlng company, lot llio contract for twenty-eight mites of rlntroad gtndtng from Mohrland In Hmery county to n point nboul halt way botwoen Helper nnd Cnxllo Onto, the latter t Mr toon miles west of Prlco In Carbon county. Tho contract calls for tho completion ot tho grndo and bridge within ninety days. Tho lino Is to bo laid with ninety pound stool for Mallet en gines of tho Intel t type. From Mohrland to Illack Hawk an entirely now Una Is to bo Con structed through what Is locally known ns tho pass, nnd which not only does away with a S per cont or worse grade, but shortens tho dlstanco from flvo and n half miles down to two and a half or bailor, doing nwny with ovor half of tho Casllo Valley road bolweon tho two points. Tho Utah Coal road crosses tho Southern Utah n short dlstnnco nbovo Casllo Junction. It thou I skirts ttm hills on tho east with an ' easy grado and comes Its closest to Prlco at n point noar "tho pinnacle," west of this city From tho pinnacle tho lino goes In back of Helper a mllo or no, crossing through tho Josso Knight properties. In Spring Canyon nnd IhonJiMsjIoi tho Halt, WsXJIohm. iutlwVConollds Mfii IsrJfHySjffyrbpcrttcs i,,A.ts' CWon.oceBTuPSmfiMMMUtilM: Camoron, 8am CBlierrill.-jHlsirsiik Iitudn. From tho HalfVVAy House to tho west the Utah Coal rWd may go up Prlco Hirer Canyon, parallel ing the Denver and Itlo Ornndo over Soldier Summit, or It tuny toko tho Willow Creek route. As yot tho survey from Casllo Onto to a con nection wltlt tho San Pedro has not Ihhiii adopted The heaviest grndo from Molir land (o Castle Oato Is understood to bo Hi per cont, while over Soldier Summit on tho west side Iho grade may bo kept down to tho same fig ure, It not lighter. Since tho Con solidated Fuel uivne valuablo coal lands In Willow Crook Just around Iho mountain point from Castlo Onto, It may bo that tho railroad will tako tho Willow Creek route. However, tho Donver nnd Itlo O ran do doa not, undor tho law, control Prlco Itlvor Canyon, so It is powllilo for another lino to build through there. Utah Construction company will by tho end of this week havo threo grading camps established along the lino ot work, most or tho grading to bo done with steam sliotols. Four carloads or grading machinery, In cluding one steam shovel, Is now nt Mohrland with much other to follow, Including men nnd teams. Work, It Is understood, will commence nt both ends and run to n connoctlon somewhoro about ten to fifteen miles from tho two glvon points. Utter tho contract Is to bo let for tho work from tho Half Way House on over tho Summit to Proo or Spanish Fork.' To tho , south ot Mohrland the company has sovoral surveying corps in tho field and n genllomun who Is In a position to know, nays tho des tination of tho road Is tho big iron deposits ot Southern Utah. If it Is constructed ou south great coking coal deposits In Huntington Canyon would bo developed, us woll as tho eoal fields of Hmery county around Orangovlllo, Castlo Data and tho town of Ktnory, to say nothing ot thoso In Sallna Canyon and further ou south- Tho Southern Utah from Price to Hiawatha and Illack Hawk Is to be relald with ninety-pound steel. Tho United State Smelting now controls tho Consolidated Fuel com pany nt Hiawatha, tho Ulaok Hawk Coal company at Illack Hawk, tho Castlo Valloy Coal company at Mohrland and about two hundred acres of flno coal lands near Castle Oato, togother with tho Castle Val loy and the Southern Utah rail roads out of Prlco. Tho present tonnage from tho threa developed JbH eamps In Carbon and Hmery coutt- IB' ties Is now nround fifty onrn a day, Vmu. which Is dclhcred from tho Sou- HI tliern Utah to tho Denver nnd Ulo H (I ran do at Price This output may B bn doubled or ovott troblod with "H better shipping fnollltles. H TheM has boon, considerable talk fH of lato that Iho United States Sittol- M ting potplo nro nboul to ncqutrn tho sill tndcpendnnt Coal and Coko company 1 flB holdings nl Konll worth, together AH1 with the llolper nnd Kenllwortli ill railroad, tho mllo In length, but BUI ns )et thoro Is nothing to confirm ffliBi a deal. When present plans nro fitvl' matured It is expected that thono IMisi Inlorostfl In Cnrbon and Kmory coun- jHVj ties will Involve moro monoy and fBsB employ a greater number of men nH than tho Utah Fuel company, con- ffssD trolled by tho doulds and Donvor 1 nnd Itlo (lrnndo IntorosU. B UNITKD HTATIM S.Mi:iTIN(l H IX) DKOhAHi: DIVIDHNI) fl United States Smottlng, Itoflnlng 901 and Mining company Is to incroosn BH Its dividends vory soon. This ro- Mm port has been In circulation for 8IRI soma time, but It Is clnlmod that IKtlJ I this lost roporl comes from ttn nuth- fjBB orllntlvo source. fffltl Whon W O, Sharp, prosldont, was Qljl asked rogardlng tho probabilities ot HMW ah Increnso In dividends, ho sold , Mfjffl ho-jwsntit prepared' .toamki,anyJ. . . iJflHl yiiyit-iBsUJLr mvM thuPylPC ii hsdwwwCBBKlMjMLiM' Mri porsonnlThsisrT to'WtirHrvsVsMMgg ffllH Interests) PbqulrtHl hy kH oiwimityf, Ulfl noar Prlco, it Is bllnvod that, h Bill knows moro about this matter than ssHll ho Is willing lo toll. flUI It has been no secret for mouths "rrHsBssi that tho United Slated was making tjl Inrgo profits, ronsldorably In oxcetui H of its dividend requirements. Soma '1 of Its shareholders havo urged tho Bl controlling Interests to ltiirtiso tho B profit dlsbursemenu for n long H time, and It seems that the dlrootorn B hnvo about decided to not upon thin IBfl suggestion now that mining condl- jBfl tlons nro Mttro lo remain on a big issfl profit making basis for at least an- IssB other year or two. sasBI HWi:i,h WI'.DDINO HOhUMNI.KD BB IN 111(111 ITALIAN KOCH. TV IH Two sunny hearts or Italy nro to- JB tiny boating us one us the result of E 'n welding In high Itnlbtn society sl which was solemnized ut' tho Tuvern tffl I Hotel (last ovenlng undor tho dlroo- UBI .Hon ot tho landlady, Mrs. Blade, and , B B I a number ot hotel guests. Yost or- BB B 'day (loorgo Mlgllarl and Isoln Puccl fill! of Sunnysldo came to Price f-r tho ssflfl purpose ot getting married, arriving sssU hero after closing hours at tho BBI court house, nnd they wero told B they would havo to wall until this H 'morning at 10 o'clock before thoy H I could get it license. Mlgllarl won IH much put out by this as ho wonted H to get Iwick to his Job at Sunnysldo. fl lo told hU troubles to tho landlady sflB ut tho Tavern, who In turn took a Bml fow of tho hotol guests Into Iter con- -Buhl fldonco and plans woro ut onco laid BBlil to holp tho coil pin out Mrs. Slndo, Btlsfl John Y. Smith, M. M. King and sov- ' Bili oral other guosts at onco got busy flH and hunted up the clerk and ro jH cordnr, who willingly Issued tho II- jflH cense. Illshop Albert Hrynor .wan IM notltletl that his services wero ro- ;Bfii quired and graciously rosponded and flB Hod tho knot. An Advocato ro- BB porter was called from his homo 'iBB und in company with about a dozen isssHI guests of the hotol wltnessod tho ' IH ceremony. After the wedding a fK lunch was sorvod In the Tuvern Ml Cafe at which toasts and epeochoa L 'BM wero made to the young pooplo by wk. jMI thoso present. This morning Mr. v, i m I and Mrs. Mlgllarl returned to Bun J B I nystde happy as a pair of turtlo itT 'ml doves, to which we might add: X M I llloss you my children, havo n oaro, mB I Winter Is coming and blanket are ' .flB dear. 'L l ?B-P Illnssed bo thobo who thus conform, Jlr ' iflB To keep each other snug and warm. ?WB ' wnno i ... i o.itMnir iiowit ils advertising oxponso goes to tho merchant who doubles HIS appropriation. It goes to tho Hvo merchants through the operation of a trado law as old JfS FlB oorsnf .f mor"u. 8"V0 ' ,?" tLiimt law stated In tho dictum: "To him that Jtath shall be given" und, ns finished by a modorn wrilor "all that they can tako awny from him who hathn'tj" ,9.i ' Mi th. . UH . .' rTii tho tlmo sees his storo grow all tho tlmo. Tho merchant who "cuts down" his advertising "cuto down" his storol Do you bol ong to the "huths" or "hath notsT" yJ Hi we merchant whoso advertising grows nit mo mu "" "" mf flstt III Pjlfc...'22A,' iJsssaustsassdsBSBMsBflBBsfl