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Show i THE, SALT LAKE TRIBUNE, SUNDAY MORNING; MAY 22, 1921. Security and Service - A. S e n s a t i o n a I S a I e l In Combined. ' Storage , - , ' s I . -- 5200 Yards of the Four Most Pop ular Fabrics of the Season Offered at Approximately Wholesale Cost ' Richirdi of counOn motion of P. sel for ths company, the arguments before the publlo utilities commission of Utah for a rehearing of the case by which the valuation of the Utah Gas and Coke company for rate making purposes waa fixed at I2.J37.680 by the commission. were continued without date. The commlselon's decision came In con nection with an application by the com a permament pany which sought to have rate for gas fixed, as well as a valuaof level prices. The tion at the present commission has etlll to fix the permanent rates, and the corresponding rate of return to the company. However, to the appeal from the valuation decision recompany had to file its motion for a was hearing within thirty days. Thin the company's rights, dona to protect and now the company sijks to have the after actual argument postponed until comthe rates bane been decided by the mission. The company, In asking a now valuation presented a showing that Its book value is 32,110.606 $3, and also claimed It would that at the high level of prices cost ths company 14,241.399 to reproduce The however, commission, the property. -- hWlhat- - such--- v latent - fluctuations Jn In price should not be considered cases, but that some regard should be had as well for the money actually invested In property, used and useful In the gas business, r. It Is understood that ofthethe company decision plana to take this phass courts. at least s S. 1921-192- 1921-192- All-Si- Georgette lk continent. d Short Talks Scheduled for Open Forum Meeting Subjects of vital interest to 8alt Lake and Ltah are to be discussed by representatives of various eivic organizations of 8alt Lake at the first of a senes of openfonim meetings to be held in connection with the regular noon luncheon - at . the -- Commercial club O. R. Allen, chairman of Wednesday. the dpen forum meeting committee, will preside. Talka ate to bo made on Additional Water -- Storage Facilities for Salt Lake, Ralf R. Woolley, hydraulic engineer, representing the Triangle club: The Green River Project, R. E. Caldwell, state engineer, Progressive Business Mens club; 4 Industrial SurJulian M. Bamberger, Kiwanls vey,.clubp M Advertising - Salt - Lake - and Utah. Harry 8. Anderson, Salt Lake Ad club; Wesley E. King on What Is a Commercial Organization! The open forum meetings are to be held the last Wednesday of each month. The program committee includes Mr. Allen, J. H. Ball, H. H. Calvin and George H. Dern. Sentencing of Liquor Law Violator Postponed Judge Tillman D. Johnson in the United States district court yesterday postponed sentencing 8amuel Oliver, who pleaded guilty to violation of the "Volstead act, until next September. Oliver is now at liberty undor bond. He was arrested January 9 on a charge of manufacturing whisky in a still located near Murray. Edward Casey, also accused of violation of the prohibition law, was given until next Saturday to plead. After hearing arguments of counsel . for the government and defendants, the court took under advisement a motion to dismiss charges against 8. E. Tallev, Harry Johnson and Martin Callahan, accused of extortion fmm bootleggers. The motion was based on technicalities the indictment, - in The eourt postponed Until this week - the sentencing of Frank Williams, Pearl Davis and Nick Mitchell, who were convicted in jury trials of telling narcotics illegally. . -- California College Post . - - Old Rose Turquoise Orchid s Navy Black Jade Silver Gray Zinc Gray Champagne Sapphire - i Eelican Gray Nickel Gray Steel Gray -Poppy Red Taupe Rust Tomato Midnight Blue Nile -Reseda Broadcloth unf-vsrsi- ty Orr-vlll- e, K Bottle Green Meadowlark Bamboo Golden Brown Wireless Blue Cuba Cardinal Wine Radio Seal Shirtings An unusual price indeed. The most desirable of, stripes, candy, pin combination in every good shirting color. A beautiful heavy quality, to give long service. 2200 Yards Cr e pe de Chine ol to Limit 13 27c Tablet, 4 for to Special sites, ruled and plain. 3 1.79 lamps, only. Glober3 for $1.00 to watt. 10 Very dependable quality. In all wanted shades; plehty of navies and brown. Exceptional. Last years prices, $2.25 to $3.00. Hundreds and Japanese Cloths,' $1.95 Each' o U Superior quality of heavy crepe do Stamped Collar and Cuff Sets Price,. dresses. An-i- deal fabric for lingerie. Street shades and all .wanted high spring- colorings, so much in demand now. A $2.50 quality. - 20c Bohemian Special Price.. Sale r 51.70 Stamped to be embroidered. In novelty stylee. To be embroidered in wool or cotton. Childrens Stamped Hats ' i "" . , in. Special . Price.. Just a very limited quantity. Package goode of last season. Ages I to 4 years only. Price (Excepting Jerseys) - -- Top Coat; Capes and Wraps Built of tho very beet and moat popular of the spring coating fabrics Charmeuxe, marvella, veldyne, trfeo-tin- s, fine velour, polo cloth. coAert, polret twin. Smartest style features of the season. Regular Prices, $37.50 to $297 .50.: Sale Prices, $18.75 to $148.75 I (Garment v.. Salon Second Floor.) -- Regular Prices, $37.50 to $237.50 - Sale Prices, $18.75 to $148.75 ) J covert gabardine wool mixtures plquetine polret twills velour checks tricotine mens wear serge Price V2 Including a special purchase of new sample suits and Walkers regular stock to say which Is to say all that Is necessary of their style and sterling quality at exactly half their regular price. sell- - si Spring Suits ing. - Marked way below regular price for quick .selling. ' All made up. '"--r Best quality changeable taffeta. In different colors. All made up. Easily worked. Painty designs. Silk Remnants maining from the seasons busy . Blouses, Slip-ov- er Price.. . Stamped Taffeta Petticoats i Many different lengths. All this'season Vinost popularveavesf And all from our- - regular stock, re- t Persuasively Priced Specials in Our Art Department sPecial y House Dresses, $1.95, Straight lino or fitted waist Plain colors, checks, stripes and plalda, Amoskeag Ginghams. Trimmed with plain colors, ail whits poplin or organdie collars and cuffs. pocket trims Lest year's price (3 95. Our regular pries this year (3.50. , (Second Floor.) ft , - n if - Medium else. 17x33, pura whits and good weight hemmed and ready for use, regular 20a each. , Limit 7 to a customer. v . 9 , , Were (4.50 teat year. o Embroidered front panel. Scalloped bottom and hemsUtched hem. You will need lots of these for sheer summer dresses. r (Third Floor.) " . i h. - j White Sateen Petticoats, $2.25; Grey, lavender, row and white. One of our most popular style?. 36-inc- h.. - , (Third Floor.) J t 7 Bath Towels for $1.00 - , range of color. Limit 6 to a customer, , 50 yards. Wide Heavy quality, slse 36x67 in the hit and miss effects, , Ringed ends, regular (2.50 each. -- v 1 to a , customer. Chiffon Taffeta YARD 6 Handkerchief Squares, 5 for $1.00 Rag Rugs, $1.95 Each Hundredsof 1769 chine. Dependable to -- wear-for Yard wide. In navy, cadet, gray and garnet grounds. , many- - patterns to choosa from, last year's prico 60c. 650 sheets. Heather Lawn ! t V. 1700 Yards J f y Salon Second Floor.) (Garment V: t Store Prices, Are Always Lower In Our Down Stairs; Sale One Hundred Childrens and Misses Hats 49c, 98c, $1.98 , Panamas,' mllan, comblnatloa straw and bemp. In black, whits and colors. Sale This Week of 500 Bungalow Aprons 79c, $1.49, $1.98 . New Dresses, $7.98 Serge, tricotine, taffeta, jersey and other desirable . materials. In sixes to- 42. range of colors and a splendid lot of Plain and ruffled apron In gingham and percale. colors. Light and dark Every slse to 44. APjndid Beautiful Silk Dresses, $13,98 , , Boys and Girls Blue Denim Play Suits, 69c 3. 8lses 3, t. 4, I, In a splendidly The kiddies can They will stand Mignonette, georgette, crepe de chine and jersey. In sport and other desirable styles. j Sixes to 44. This Is a really wonderful lot of dresses at a 6, 7, made suit. romp and play in them all they wish. the roughest wear. reasonable price. Flour Sales 9 to 12 o Clock Monday Womens Silk Blonses and Womens and Girls Middies and Jackets, $1.19 Waists, $1.89 SALE OF 1000 NEW HATS For Spring and Summer $1.49, $2.49, $3.49, $4749 Hundreds of hew arrivals go Into this great sale of desirable hats. Thera is scarcely s kind but what we can supply. 5 oclock. Interment will be In the Sandy The company is operating In the workautomobile and cemetery. men's compensation, Inteams, property 1.damage and liability Is its Utah E. surance field Thomas Etdredge. 63 years of ,4e. died s It Willey was organised in Friday night process attorney. at ths family residence, 219 cf (635,363.64. 1906. and has a surplus West Third South street. He was a member of the G. A. R. The body la In the care of Xl'Gomiell A Go., under- Deaths and Funerals Plain white and white with colored 'collars and cuffs. Sixes 8,to 16 and 26 to 44. Made of fine Jean. Womens Silk and Cloth crepe. Sixes to 44. White Corsets, 89c Dresses, $5.98 Fins model In sixes 30 to 30. and ends, but st this The lowest price reached in corsets sra sines the war. pries startling bargains. Odda ards street, yesterday. Funeral services will be held st ths residence tomorrow afternoon st 2 o'clock. Interment will In addition to be in the City cemetery. the parents, the child to survived by two brothers, Clair and Charles Albert, and a sister, Louise Dahlqulst. takers Mrs. Sarah Flesh, white, navy and black. In crepe de china and georgette FUNERALS. Funeral services for James O Puffin, who died Irldav, will be lisld this afterward noon at 2 o'ciot k in ths Thirty-thir- d L D. 8. chapel. Interment will be in City cemetery. Funeral services for Perry Le Grand Young were held In ths Sugarhouss h D. S. ward meeting house Tueadsy, May IT, Elder Curtis of ths ward bishopric -- w ' preuldtn g. Opening prayers were offered by Alva of 1 Mothers Here Is a Good Bargain Duncan, 72 years of age, DEATHS. died yesterday at the. family home, 1.453 Carl Erik Ryberg died Friday at the Twelfth East street. The body was rehome of his son, Charles Ryuerg, 751 moved to the 8. P. Evans undertaking was born parlors, from which place funeral serArapahoe avenue. Mr. Ryberg vices will be held tomorrow afternoon at in Sweden, May 17, 13(9. In his comin held high esteem and 3 oclock. Interment will be in Mount munity hs was INSURANCE COMPANY LICENCED. had been a successful farmer. His wife Olivet cemetery. Ths Federal Mutual Liability insurance died a month ago. He is survived by John Robert Dahlqulst, 6 years of age, lour grandchildren. .In addition to the son oompany of Huston. Maae has been by J. W. Walker, stats Insurance Funeral services V will be held in the sorroruhartes A. and Mattle Dahlqtilirt, to in do business Utah. house commissioner, this afternoon at died at ths family residence, 744 Rich Bandy meeting 4 - I Bobolink n.98 40-inc- Coral Buff Purple Emerald 400 Yards s' C)l-tfftc- -- Crepe paper, Marked-a- t White Light Blue 7 i to a Limit 0 U. of U. Professor Offered Professor C. D. Steiner. 1376 Butler avenue, of the rural education department of the University of Utah, has received n offer from tho Unlveniity of h in a similar department In th Berkeley Institution. Hi. at portion tho ehool VIII too associate if hs accepts, according to thsprofesaor. offer, and there will be a definite underatsnding se to- advancement to professorship within thres years. "This Is another evidence of the quality of the faculty of the University of Utah. Bald Apoetlo John A. Widtsoe, president, lest nlgha. "We do not like to think of losing Professor Steiner. but we are not anxious to stand in his way to service in a larger Institution, at a larger salary than we can pay." Professor Steiner bat been at the since 1913. He. came from Ohio, in which state he' was educated He received hi B. 8. degree at Ohio Stats university and afterwards- - took graduate work at Chicago university and tho Kansas Stats Agricultural college. i s . Electric Light approximately todays wholesale price The last time we put 900 yards of it on sale at this price,' itjlisap-peare- d "" " . in one day! ,71 -- These Bargains Must Be Taken Off at the Stroke of 12, So . Come Early , Standard Percales, 6 Jf or $1.00 Creme Oil Soap, 6 for 39c' customer. Tung-s- 2 The early bookings announced for appearance at the Orpheum here during the coming season include many stars and acts never before seen in . Salt Lake. There will be an absence to a great degree of the girl acts and tabloid musical comedies and a more strict adherence to standard vaudeville acts, with many comedy features and individual stars, Crepe YARD - p Monday, 9 to 12 oclock only Writing - tablets I onlyr-- :A heavy- quality. - Waldorf Toilet Paper, 6 for 54c 900; Yards 2 . ' , -- Orpheum to Close for Season Next Sunday The Salt Lake Orpheum theater will close for the 1920:1921 season next Sunday night, according to an announre' went mads yesterday bv Resident hlan' aeer George L. Allen, following receipt of advices from the New York offices of the Orpheum circuit. In making the announcement of the closing of the local vaudeville house Manager Allen said that it would probseason ably reopen for the late in July or early in August. The theater opened Iotl ihe4resent season in August, 1920, and it is expected that the new season will begin about the same time this year,-Th- e New York advices carry the news of Martin Becks reeent return from England and continental Jurope. The president of the Orpheum eircuit visited most of the capitals jf Europe in search of new acts and vaudeville talent to appear on the Orpheum eircuit season, and it ia reduring the ported that he secured bookings for some of the biggest vaudeville successes seen recently in England and npon the - -r-.- This is a sale that needs no preliminary explanation. They are values that only we, with our extraqrdinary buying power, will offer. where in town has careful investigation revealed values that even approach them.' We invite comparison. See for; yourself. rate-maki- to-th- . t, and Valuation Established i j Aside from complete safetR you hava the advice of our designers as to remodeling and repairs, and LOW SUM- -. MER RATES FOR THE WORK HOW, Seeks to , Have Permanent Rate Fixed Company I 0 j Reliability Safety j Accessibility. xi ur ammonia cold storage la vault. 9 j fife; ' Here Is a wonderful combination for ths sum, mer season. best colors. - Infanta, Childrens and Young Womens White Dresses Check, stripe, and plaid, gg. 149 gg an(j in unusually charming toco and colors. . Jackets and Sport Skirts, $6.49 Ths skirts are the latest styles In stripes - and plaids. The Jersey costa are the Extra Special styles The values stand .You are 5 ' sure to v Bis. T to , 14. 'All f' mads of fins quality organdts. trimmed with Uke JhF, fine lace end embroidery. Sixes ars months to 1 ' - years. out . , -- afternoon at IT .SO o'clock from the resi- sen, the Infant daughter of Mr. and Mrs. dence of Dr. Stanley H. Clawson, 66 Sec- Earl Jensen of South Cottonwood, who ond avenue. Interment will be in City died Wednesday. wlU be held In the South Cottonwood ward chapel at 3 30 cemetery. o'clock today. The body (nay be viewed Funeral services for James G. Duffin, at the residence from 10 until 2 oclock. who died Friday, will be held in the Interment will be In the Murray City third ward chapel this afternoon cemetery. Thirty at 3 o'clock, interment will be In the The be viewed cemetery. City body may OFFICERS ARE CHOSEN. at the family residence, 378 Douglas aveSpecial to Tke Tritmne. nue, from 11 until 1 oclock. secFuneral services for Catherine Marie MAN'TL May 31. Ths reviewer Doyle, wh odied May IS at the residence, Rasmus Mlckelron, 66 years pf age, died tion of the Ladies Lltert-- y club of Msntl 3314 South Ninth East street, will be held yesterday at a local hospital. He was bald Its annual election ' of officers s chapel tomorrow, where unmarried, and haa a brother, James st t .Ann requiem mass will be celebrated at 10 Mlckelson, who will arrive tomorrow from Thursday. Ths officers era as follows; Oclock In the morning. Interment will Big Plney, Wyo., to make funeral ar- President, Mrs. W. D. Bentley; vice , be In Calvary cemetery. rangements. i The body to In the car of president, Mrs. Lewis Besson; secretary, I S. D. Evans A Co- Mrs. C. E.'Egfcrtton; treasurer, Mrs. U--F. who died Friday, will be held tomorrow Fun era) services for Fern Lucile Jen Becker. Stout, deputy warden of the state prison, where Mr. Young had been employed. The speakers were John M. Young. Judge Le. Grand Young. President Seymour B. Young, former Warden George A. Storrs, Harden Bennlon and B. S Young, Musk! by the ward choir. A large cortege --followed the body tor the In Wasatch B. Lawn cemetery. grave 8. Young had charge of the dedicatory eervicec at the grave. ed |