OCR Text |
Show THE Circulation Department. t0 Twenty-- f ittU street. Telephone 815. D. SAYS 'OLD COW j ENTERTAIN PIONEERS Greenwell. Correspondent. J, 1641 avenue. "Washington Tela. 915 or PR01A TO of Pacific Islanders. Special Ex-pect- ed Aid. nerMdntibl!'n.l From all Indications Ojrden, th baby buggy parade, which is to be held her in connection with th Pioneer day celebration July 24, will be on of the most popular features of the program. Not only are the babies expected to Attract much attention, but the attendants will also, for the rules provide that the attendants must be younjr women between th a pes of 15 and IS years. They must be attired In whlt with the conventional nurses' to Ttm July 8. Special tn Tt neraM-nepntillrsn- .l Oi'Un, July S. Twenty of th forty members of the WoWr county Demo- cratic central commute. mealing this nfternocn In Judge- N. J. Harris courtroom, fixed Au;uit 5 as tho date for holding & convention at which delegates will bo selected for tho judicial, congressional and state convention. It was voted that delegates for th August & convention also shall be the delegate to th regular county convention to be held after th state convention, unless the Dmocrats In the several precincts choose to select eeparat d'lsrations. County Ctwlrman S. P. Smith announced that the Democratic etat committer had asrre l tho atato convention be held In Ogden nnd he thoucht Austust li would be selected a the date. Th cons? regional conventions will b held, perhaps, at th earn antime. exTli committeemen nrpolnted H. S. ecutive committee made up of secreS. P. Dobbs, Fmtth, chairman; Thomas A. Shreeves, vice chairtary; treasurer; man; Waiter N. Karr. W. H. Thomas Fowles of Kanesvllle. ItLowder of ILnrrlsville and - II. Wll-lar- d - ih'-u'.- d . Ar-gobris- ht. Wade M. Johnson and D. Hills of OKden. Thl execuchare of the tive committee willthtakenomination of until campaign when th nominees and county officers, executive commute may sepresent committee. lect n. new executiveannounced that TV. Chairman Smith committeeIT. Lowder bad resigned man from llarrlsvllle. J. Jt. Ileus from VI. Iratt from tho Third Hooper and A.The committeemen electdistrict city to succeed Lowder ed 1 J. Taylor nnd George 11. Fowler to succeed Heus. but no on could b found who would accept the position in in imru district. money "Shall w receiv any outside asked lA. G. Harris of this ycarr Offlen. I don't know whether w shall any Inside money, even." ChairSmith man replied, halfIsseriously. -dry, pretty DemoTh old cow herecomment. was Harris closing th opinion that If crats expressed succeed in getting- rood tho party can nominations here, money men to accept will be forthcoming. Th question of fusion with the was brought up, but did not consideration, receive favorable, Chairman Smith said Dobbs and pet believed th Democrats would theyvotes beof those Progressives thwhothird the of lieved in th principlesRoosevelt fans v. but th strictly part would vote for Hughes tne Chairman Smith said h was or and the Progressives opinion that in Halt Lake I'.ourbcns would combine but as yet no overtures had county, been made In Weber. : re-cel- caps. Am baby under the at: of 19 months l to ellgltde for Chairman lieberentrance, Scowcroft.according who attain that the affair will not be emphasises a baby show, as the are to be awarded to those whoprizes have the most decorated artistically carriage or or the carriagebaby trimmed In the most uniuue manner. Th chairman says th attendant may be th sister of tho baby she wheels, th friend or an employee. If it is th committee on th necessary will suoply the attendants.baby parade Present provide for th 7 oparade to rorm atplans clock Jlail park at city P. m. on tho day of th celebration and the route will be protected by police and lioy scouts. Trartlo will be suspended over th streets to be covered $25 First, second and third prizes ofThose $15 and $10 will be awarded. selected as adjudicators are Lieslie S. Mrs. I It. Eccles and Mrs. Hodgson, Maude U. Porter. In connection with the advertising of th Pioneer day celebration, th executive committee today arranged for announcements to b made in all the LAtter-da- y Saints churches of northern Utah at services tomorrow. The celebration Is to be given under the of the Daughters of th Morauspices mon Pioneers, but business men and many other organizations are lending support. po-ca- rt Ogdcn Minor Items cs ary . MALAN FAMILY MEETS Organlaatlon t?:r!al at Effected Held In TV. t- - lie-unio- CljEden. nral1-nepnK!cn.- l Oziifn July 3. Th Malan familyMa-ef f John Daniel TTtah. descendants 1 lan who cam to Utah as a pioneerand 1853. held a reunion her yesterday obassociation, on of th formed an shatl be the feathering f whl-ject of genealogical data. Frank 3L MaMUnrn lan was elected president.Dora r, T. alm Hotalinsr. secretary; assistant secretary, and nmlly D. Ma.ldock. treasurer. to Th vice presidents elected th several branches cf th famMaThomas. Emily Maare OIK ily Albert Phaw, lan. Ophelia Frtrley and I.llza Malan lan. Ftpph"n Malan those who atXrumoerman. Amonsr pioneers tended th reunion were flvMalan FarMadeline Stephen Malan. FarIsaac Malan P. Lmllv Farley, ley, Shaw. Malan Julia and ley h Hol-the- lary rep-ree- nt F-rk- r ASK FAIR. SITE NEW Fnrchase Frr Tract. "Weber Farm Ilnr of J?el Trrc-- n tr tr-w"- TTi re ttsM-RriMIrsn.- 1 The fair grounds 0;rln. July of thI. Weber county farm committee a myelin bureau is secklnsr to obtaincommission-cand county with th citv a proposal before th officers fput tract bea twenty-acr- e to purchas streets asW.a and Seventh croumts. tween Keond fair for a, permanent s'te Lowder. fair 31 chairman of th that today rrounds committee, reported n It was th or'nlon of th Isenmmlttee-rneIdeal for In question th fit th purp? specified. For rearly a year th farm otirean a We-y- ,r Ttas endeavored to event. an as annual fair county was orcmnlJd too 1st to Th bureau sal- of th old fair errounds prevent th Hallway to th Ogdn. Lotran ofA thIdaho bureau conMembers company. an annual fair wlli do much tend that th standards of toward raising and stock ralsinpr. They agriculturaleountv commission In symhave the pathy with ther endeavors. m re-establ- ish lal AitKnmm ?ne-!-al PROFIT YIELD GOATS Valuable lit 'National Fore-s- t for Wool. t The ITrrslfl RerrrMVan.l Osrdn. July S. Ansrora coats may bp the national forprazed at n profit In a bulletin received ests, accord fnc to office from th defore.t by the local conducted experithat has nnic-ripartment for their ments In raisins sets forth that bulletin This fjprr. were crazed on national r., ' poats in six states last year. foes: Government foresters. It Is stated, do Jthat th destructive appetite pot fearcoat will damac forests, but of the destruction . of br"h content that th tends th th animalsInflaraabl to tv underbrush fire braid aas menace. constitutes to Th fcrest service Is prepared Information to any who ar interested In the proat ralslnir business. s .) (Special to Tho Ogden. July 8. Ily reason of a re th Weber Lumber com organization, pany of Oxden is to b known here after as th Overland Lumber company in and branches will be maintained Idaho and Wyoming. The new officers are: President, George K. Merrill; vice James S. Taylor; secretary. presldnt, It. IZ. lioyd nnd C. H. U. Feybert. treas urer. Mr. Foyd will be general man ager and S.Mr. Heybert his bassistant McConnell will while R. local manager. Reorganization of the com pany will mean an Increase in its cap Italfzatlon, it Is stated. Wonan' Ordered. Tn order that a child shall not be born in a cell of th Weber county jail. Judre J. A. Howell today released Bertha liurnett. on her own recognizance. Her colored, on a charge of assault with intent trial to murder will not b had for several weeks. Sh was arrested several weeks asro tn connection with th shooting of Clinton Stevenson, her sweetheart, who has recovered from his wound and has departed for parts unknown to th police. QtMirrel lntlM to A rrtt. A s a result of a quarrel over rights to the use of real ii. if. Hutler. a swore water, irrigation dent In W. Twelfth street, today to a his neighbor. D. Powell, charging John complaint with battery. Futler declares that Powell struck him on the side of th head with a club, lie came to th city for a complaint as soon as h had his wounds dressed. Putler declares that at the time he was struck he was endeavoring to prevent Powell's son from raising a headgat in an Irrigation ditch. Mast Do SweoplngT Karly Folic serreanls today were instructed to that the customary notify business men of the sidewalks In dally ofweeping must be done befront 8 thtdr places o'clock a. m.. a time at which fore but few pedestrians will suffer from the dust clouds resulting. Merchants ar to be Informed that they must not into the sweep rubbish or garbage but maintain cans for the colputters of such refuse. lection Asks Whereabout of Rrotherv Frn-eMoreau. 54 Rue d Bagncax. France, has sent a postal card to Mayor Abbot R. Heywood, asking him for assistance in his efforts to locate a brother. Joseph Moreau. who is to b in Ogden. Krnest writes thought that family affairs demand the absent brother's presence. Funeral Mr. Creahan'at Funeral. services for Mrs. Farah Creahan will be held at 2 o'clock Sunday afternoon In St. Joseph's Catholic church and burial will tak place In- the city cemetery. Permit- - A marriage iet Marrla license was Issued today to Alvin I Dlvelbess of fian Bernardino, Cal. and Pearl K. Adams of Ogden. IlIe AKalnst 1. 11. Made by IIU Wife. Acctisntlon MoraCnn Cpcitt to I TTis nri1-n-rnMteat,.- 'l Colorado Frrincs. CoJo.. July 8. n. Woestman. on of th elsrht th property now ocreruted helmtheto trreat I'nton depot tn curred by nilllion-sl-- e reputed Ft Ic':ls. and nlfo aa suit for separate pnwer mut filed rnalntenance court. ly hi wife here in th ilisfrlct have n and his wife Fertha if T.i3. eyr had a stormy career.inItSalt ti-rlr.e thlr marriageIn May ofLake, lie J?l.. crrurrins wedding In his wife, by complaint the rhircH I, with belnrr a habituwl o is his d. Is also accused of he and drunkard al, Fd-wa- rd V.o-trra- e se-on- cruelty. Arrests Made by to Th Herald-Republican- SUMMER SCHOOL ENDS EtflrMh Grade Stndent Ppeelal to The Graduate After Conn. Vacation nerl1-Rpubl!ea- r. The Logan city sumLogan, July 8.closed. mer school has Thi3 school was conducted by the city board of education In order to assist eighth grade pupils who had faihM In one or two subjects to make up their work and he eJIglblbe to enter high school in the fall. The folowlng Is a list of those who have graduated from the eighth grade as a result of this special summer Milton Barreta. Amos school work: Brown, Miriam Crawford, Margaret Josephine Cardon, Clara Cranney Clark, Myron Carlisle, Salome Downs, Luella Dalnes. Adel Ellerman, Viola Erlckson. Lionel Farrell. Harold Fon-talCalvin Jlallstoj.o. Leland Hawkes, Annl Hawkins, Margaret Hawkins, Laveda Holland, Armeda Jorgensen, Jacobron, Larue Jacobsben, Lyman Johnson. Clara Johnson, Leroy Mltton. William Meyrick. Lavene Olsen. Rulon Redford, Lillle Neuberger, Elmer Revnolda, Simon Smith. Mallen Squires. Bernard Secrest. Effio Spenst. La Blanch Smith, Thelma Shelton, Amber Norman. Nada Hendricks. Etta Worley, Keith Westover, Byron Smith. n. La-vi- Eureka Neivs Notes ne j e. CHOSEN IS Academy Instructor Selected for Coming Term. SpecUl to The Trie. July 8. The following members of the faculty of Price academy were selected for the coming term: Prof. A. C. Hoover formerly of MonMiss tana Wesleyan. will be principal; of Mount H Morningstar. graduate Hnlyoke, instructor In vole and Engof'Depauw lish: Miss Lois Casscll in piano and hisinstructor "Mrs. M. O. Cleveland will retain tory of the girls' her position as matron Other members of the dormitory. will b selected immediately. The prospects are very bright for ajti excellent year. Irl HeraSd-rteptibnea- uni-versit- v. fa-cul- tv ! Roosevelt News Items Special to Th IJeraM-rterubl!ca- free dance Roosvelt, atJuly theatre last was the Elan given event of the hall. rirrht ns an openingbeen used only as Heretofore it has a picture show house, but was purchased recently by the local Farmers' Commission company. It is the inthe new manajtement to tention ItofInto a dance hall and S. A convert public officers show house combined, Th are and directors of the company J. M. RusXavler Ballou. president; president; L. A. Russell, secsell, vice ond vice president: W. A. Warthen, treasurer: Dr. J. O. King, secretary; R. F. Shumway. J. E. Prince and J. E. Warthen, directors; II. A. Isham, manager. J. Edward Taylor, state horticultural Inspector, was here this week. Oscar Kirkham of Salt Lake, field for Y. M. M. I. A., was here secretary the past week In the Interest of the i Boy Scouts. to is M u LaiiA Li 1000 KITS Yg1 bttb nm e d r n n 'r ft Values s a ui up to 55.00 3 Every child's hat in stock, both fancy and tailored styles, will be rificed tomorrow, Monday, at the above price. We also include an precedented offering WaBnoes Up to mo Undoubtedly, this is the FINEST LOT OF TRIMMED HATS that Salt Lake women HAVE EVER SEEN AT SUCH A LOW PRICE. All are artistically trimmed in the season's exclusive novelties. There is sure to be active selling at the above price, so try and come in the morning. sac- un- of woiine ETTiSIllTS Regular $2.50 value at NOTICE Owing to the extremely low prices, we will make no charges, and no telephone or C. 0. D. orders will be filled during this sale. Jff I fif'-- ,s vHvV The lightest and most serviceable of summer petticoats. perfect fitting, adjustable v y All with the top". THE STORE TIIAT MADE "YOUR CREDIT IS GOOD" FAMOUS. Special to Ths Prize in "Thrift" Essay Contest Won CONFISCATION by Kaysville Girl KICK AGAINST 00 DY PINCH OF HUNGER IN ROLE OFPE ACEMAKER FELT .! 8. Thirty-tw- o Pocatello, Ida., Julywere unresidents of Pocatello placed W. W. der arrest today when. Sheriff Cooper nnd County Attorney O. D. Smith began a raid on bootleggers. Among th prisoners now in the of the Idaho county jail for violation dry law are several men of prominence. at Mon-tansr- r-l-- erl Special j Ha The Biggest Values We've Ever Invited You to Buy .l Pocatello Sheriff. Herald-Republican- FACULTY n OOlTLEGGERS Thirty-tw- o re-iie- SALT LAKER IN COURT nerald-Itcpublieati- j - Fro-preiv- to Tb Payson, July 9. The program has been completed for the three days' reunion or the Pacific Islanders and their friends and Pioneer day celebraThe committee has received tion. word from Gov. William Svry that his appointments have been so arranged 24. that lie may be in Payson July 22, the misSaturday evening, July sionaries and citizens of Spanish Fork will Kiv a social to th members of the general committee of Pacific Islands Missionary reunion and natives. 23, every ward in Nebo Sunday,will July be visited by a member of stake the committee, and addresses and music will be In order. Following is the program for the celebration in payson, July 2i: Raising- of stars and stripes and sa lute at sunrise; serenade by bands; parade at 10 a. m.. pioneer section. floats representing phases of pioneer life; Pacific islanders' section, floats scenes and life In Hawaii. depicting Samoa. Touea. Tahaltl and New Zealand; miscellaneous section, floats business and various representing of modern social life, bur Phases etc. lesques, At 11 a. m. an open air meeting will be held at City park, with the followgreeting program: Music by bands,missionand returned ings of nativesMaori song and chorus, prayer, aries; "New Zealand"; speech of welcome, Fred Lewis. Jr.; response. President F. Smith; Samoan song; eulogy Joseph to pioneers. Gov. William Spry: music band; guitar solo. Mathias Nelson; by solo and chorus, "Hawaii"; benediction. From 1 to 3 p. m., picnic at park; and sports at 3.30 p. m.. baseball gam at hlKh school campus; at 6 p. m., big maori kapa (native feast) at campus. cooked to and be be.ef, pork. fish, etc., served native style; at 8 p. m., concert native songs, chorat tabernacle, select uses, dances, vocal and instrumental music by local and Salt Lake talent. Prof. J. J. McClellan and Mrs. Emma Morris will furnish numbers. Ramsey The festivities will conclude with dancing. It is expected that this will be one of the largest meetings ever held in this part of the state. The chairman of committees are: Dr. A. L. Curtis, Worsencroft, general chairman; W. L. and program; Leo L Gardner, publicity J. A. Loveless and Roswell Bradford, reception and entertainment; George Tanner, sports and barbecue: John Done, finance: Lester Francom, Joseph Reece and John Jex, parade: O. P. Cloward. decoration; Henry Nebeker, seats and platform. RAID vo I Advertising Only the Truth Lid w M u w m Fete Will Be Featured by Rites and Native Feast HUMMER Attendants Also Democrats of IVcbcr Worry Pretty to Add to Over Financial Attractiveness. lFrr,l THE BEST PLACE TO SHOP, AFTER ALL. 2151-I- C EXPECT BABV PARADE IS ABOUT DRY' SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH, SUNDAY, JULY 9, 1916. N. PAYSON PREPARED TO iPARTMENT OGDEN HERALD-REPUBLICA- neralil-Republlca- No gales. Ariz.. July 8. Representatives of American business interests in are preparing a formal protest Sonora, to be filed with the department of state in Washington, against the confiscation of hundreds of thousands of dollars' worth of liv.e stock and other moveable by Mexican authorities, it was property announced here tonight. Demands for Indemnity in these cases will be coupled, it was said, with the claims for other large sums for damages Inflicted by marauding bands who are overrunning outlying districts of Sonora, while the troops are concentrated along the railroad. Among American Interests that are said to have suffered heavily are the Drachnian estate, between 2500 and 5000. head of cattle: Giroux Cattle company, more than 100 head; Cananea Cattle company, which markets more than 10,000 head annually; the Sherman near Cumpas, the Slaughter ranch, near ranch Moctezuma, and the West Coast Cattle company, in the Altar district. The Richardson Construction comat El and pany's warehouses of proviNacozari have been strippedTigre sions p.nd supplies and the houses of American officials and employees robbed, although the mines themselves have not been damaged. Thousands of dollars' worth of supplies have been taken from the Cananea Copper com pany. The Southern Pacific company, by an agreement protected although with the Mexican ROvernment, has lost. It Is estimated, more than $1,500,000 to locomotives and through cars and damage the destruction of the great at Empalme, whose equipment shopsbeen moved to Maytorena and has CIRCUIT COURT ADJOURNS. Price, July 8. A. II. Christenscn, district court, adjourned judge of the the term until August 28, at which time the cases of the Standard Coal Fuel company, company vs. the Carbon and the Ketchum Coal company vs. the will Pleasant Valley Coalthe company, sesAt b taken up. present sion of court, Mary Pavech was a divorce from Steven granted on the ground of cruelty. Annie Williams of Scofleld wa9 granted a divorco from David Williams. WATER COMPANY INCORPORATES. Trenton City Logan, July 8. The Water company has filed its articles of incorporation with the county clerk. The company Is capitalized at $5000 nd shares are of the value of $25 each. Tuere are five Incorporators. The officers are: President, Mrs. A. M. Hill; ch YORK, July 8. NEW was made tonight vention in the conof the NationaT Education association of the winners in an contest on "Thrift." The National essay Education association under the offer of S. W. Strauss, president of the American Society for Thrift, conducted essay contests in the public schools and out among adults. The school 20,000 essays from school brought children. The winners of the school children's contest were: First, Nellie Harrington, Washington, D. C; second, William Denninger, Scranton, Pa.; third, Ruth Carver, Louisville, Ky.; fourth, Charles Lane, Imperial, Cal.; fifth. Laura Yates, W. Va.; sixth, Eleanor Webster, New Brighton, Pa.; seventh, Nettie Mart, Jamestown, N. D. ; tied for eighth place, Abrara Green, Scranton, Pa.; Zeletee McClellan, Kaysville. Utah, Firman de Vineland, N. J., and Evan Alsip,Maris, Cal. Imperial, The winners in the adults' contests: First, Teresa M. Lenney, New Rochelle, N. Y.; tied for second Frances V. Frisbie, Brooklyn, N.place, Y., and Cora I Swafford. Minneapolis, Minn. The board of directors of the association today elected the following as members of the executive committee: J. Y. Joyner, state superintendent of schools of North Carolina; W. R. Siders, superintendent of schools, Pocatello, Ida., and George B. Cook, state superintendent of schools of Arkansas. The committee is now complete. Those elected members of the board of trustees were Carrol Pearce, Milwaukee, chairman; J. Y. Jovner, Raleigh, N. C, secretary; Robert J. Aley, Orono, Me.; Agnes J. Doherty, St. Paul, Minn., and Waller R. Siders, Pocatello, Ida. Dur-an- d The trustees met and W. Springer of Ann Arbor, Mich., vice president. Alma Hill; secretary as secretary of the general association. and treasurer, I. L. Pullum. The directors took a preferential in regard to the location of the ballot DOCTOR JOINS GUARD next convention. The first choice was N. J.; the second PortPark, Asbury land, Ore.; the third choice Cincinnati Itrlgbam City 1'hynlctan to Have Serv- and the fourth Milwaukee. The board ice With Hospital Corp. of trustees and the executive commit8. AnA. Dr. A. Brigha'm City. July tee acting jointly choose the place of derson of this city was drafted into convention. field of the Utah the hospital service national guard yesterdaytoand left last lor Salt Lake Dr. report for WOULD CURB PRESS evening The selection of Anderson duty.Governor his Bill Introduced In Honae II en Sprythecame throughmediby on association with Wyoming Circulation of Kumorx, ring Of which he was a memhr cal corns. while a resident of that state prior to Washington, July S. A bill introto lirignam aoout a year ago. duced today by Representative Campcoming Dr. Anderson lost no time in arranging bell of Kansas would make it unlawful f6r his affairs here. person, any company, corporation, He returned from Salt Lake Tues- press association, news association or after to the or newspaper publication evening having day publish two passed examination there and later transmit any false report or rumor days had arranged for his practice being bearing on the international relations care his absence of during and of the United States and tending taken to inexto was on his way Salt Lake. He affect relations with peaceful juriously an early company of the government or people of any other pects toto Join the border, where he will militia It was referred to the jutake up his duties in the medical corps country. committee. diciary of the Utah national guard. DAVIS GETS PROMOTION'. nKXRFIT POSTPONED. Messages were received in Salt Lake benefit yesterday of the appointment of J. M. Brlgham City, July 8. toThe in have been Davis as vice president of performance which wasthe Home Dra- the operating and maintenancecharge by presented last night departmatic company in behalf of Nephl Han- ment of the Baltimore & Ohio railroad sen was postponed owing to the in- For many years Mr. Davis was staof two members of the cast tioned in Salt Lake as ability to be present at the final rehearsal tendent of the Oregongeneral Short superinLine In is addition he well in known Thursday evening. all the railroad circles of practically the west. TIIOOPS PASS POCATELLO. Mr. Davis has been connected with the Pocatello. July 8. The Second Idaho operating department of the Baltimore Ohio and has been in the east several passed through Pocatello this & regiment bound for the Mexican border. years. morning, Three trains over the Short Line VOLUNTEER IN Y. M. C. A. SERVICE. special are hauling the men over this division, New York, July 8. Francis B. Sayre, in charge of Joel L. Priest, general of President Wilson, and agent for the Short Line. W. Perkins, Jr., son of the ProGeorge STAKE OUTING AT S ALTAI It. gressive party leader, are menamong who forty have The Hyrum stake university and college Logan, July 8. throu to borto Mexican the volunteered go h its school, superinSunday of is promoting an der for the summer as secretaries tendent, Ezra Cooley beach and navy department of the on July 10. the armyMen's excursion to Saltair Christian association. Yroung The excursion is over the O. L. & I. Yale, Princeton, Columbia and electric line. A train other Harvard, Hallway company universities and several colleges will leave Mlllville at 7 a. m. and one are among the volunteers represented will leave Hyrum the same hour. it was announced today. WILL MARKY UTAH Gilt I,. 83 HORSES nURNED. Special 10 The horses Denver, July 8. Eighty-fiv- e Chicago, July 8. Leslie Merrill, of were burned to death in a fire at the Cleveland, O., obtained a license here Standard Livery company stables shorttodav to wed Miss Eliza Deal of ly before midnight. The loss is estimated at about $70,000. Sprlngvllle, Utah. Her-mosill- . Schulman Eureka, July two Harry men. were and E. Goldstein, junk of convicted in Judge Bromley's courtmen property. The from receiving stolen brass and copper bearings bought Mammoth three lads, who admitted from th property the bearings stealing of the Black Jack mine. The Judge sentenced them to fifty days in the Followcounty Jail or a fine of $50. men were their trial the Junk ing locked in the city Jail here for the night. During the night theyofmanaged the Jail the roof to escape through by tho nld of anobroken candlestick. trace of the fugiyet Although as tives has been found Sheriff Daniel Martin is confident that they will soon be captured. The Knights of th Maccabee of Euan entertainment last evenreka had deputy supreme ing. Dr. Hanchett, commander; J. A. Bank, state commander, and Elliott M. Jordan, past state commander, attended the regular of the order last evening. The meeting arrived on the visitors train and a program of went to the hall, wherenight musical and speaking numbers was rendered in their honor. BEET GROWERS JUBILANT. Logan. Julyare8. Cache Valley sugar over the anbeet farmers nouncement that rejoicing the Amalgamated Sugar company has decided to give 50 cents & ton more for beets than the 1916 contract calls for. The contract reads for $5. and the factories have announced that they will pay $5.50. With the prospect of a 125,000-to- n crop in this valley, the decision to pay th mean the distribuadditional price will tion of upwards of $62,500 to the Cache valley farmers this season on their beet crop. 8. Pa-ve- Demands for Indemnity to Miss Zeletee McClellan Is Idaho Adjutant General Given Honor at National Be Presented to Mexico to Smooth Out Education Convention. by Americans. Regimental Row. Man-ningto- o. re-elect- son-in-la- w Herald-Uepulihcan- .l . l4 ed n, At-temp- ts the Idaho troops to Accompanying Salt Lake on their way to the Mexican border yesterday was Adj. Gen. Charles S. Moody, of Gov. Moses personal Alexander.representative he Ostensibly was with the troops to check over the in his visit to Salt pay roll; to sweeten the Lake was toreality attempt bitterness engendered when Col. William H. Edelblute and the majors of the regiment clashed with the government over the appointment of Philip H. Crow, former adjutant general, as lieutenant colonel, to fill a vacancy. Officers of the regiment had sought to secure the appointment of Capt. Max B. Garber, U. S. A., instructor-inspecto- r of the Idaho guard, to the position. When the governor insisted on apfriend. Colonel pointing his political Edelblute, Majors D. P. Olson, Charles Wilkins and Harry T. Lewis went to the supreme court for a writ of prohibition to prevent the appointment. The temporary writ was issued but before it could be made permanent the Idaho regiment was sworn into the service of the United States, so the officers secured the quashing of the action. The governor then Moody he as adjutant general. appointed Previously had been a major in the medical corps. On his trip to Salt Lake with the regito make peace bement he few officers who sided with tween theattempted the governor and the majority, who had favored the appointment of Colonel Edelblute. So far as could be learned no assurances of any kind were given him, but officers of the regiment stated that Colonel Crow is personally well liked, would have preferred the though they of Captain Garber to the appointment end of increasing the efficiency of the organization. Captain Garber remained in Boise to await orders from the war department. General Moody will not acAdjutant the troops to the border, but company will return to Idaho. MIL YANKEE 1 GERMANY System of Food Distribution Attacked at Session of Berlin City Council. The Hague, July 8. During a debate on the food situation at the Thursday evening session of the Berlin city council the socialists complained of the in- equality and Inadequacy of the distribution of food under the mass feeding scheme. Councillor Mommsen declared that no resident of Berlin was yet starving. This elicited a sharp contradiction. Physician Municipal Weber maintained there was no question of underfeeding yet. whereupon cries of strong dissent arose from the socialists. counsellor Hoffmann The socilist said that he himself had been a patient at the Rudolph Virchow hospital for months and knew how seriously the had been reduced. Herr Hoffdietary mann demanded that President von Batocki of the food regulation board should be told that sufficient food was disavailable, but that the method of resitribution was all wrong and the dents of Berlin would stand it no longer. The population of Cologne is excited over the municipality's announcement, that mass feeding has been postponed some for six weeks, indefinitely, to the lack ofsay potatoes. owing The goulash cannon, travare insufficient, kitchens, eling and are besieged byentirely crowds of hungry persons, while housewives go dinner-lesthe Vorwaerts says. so-call- s, UTAH FAILURES FEWER, SHDftV OFFICIAL FIGURES in First Six Months of Year, De- crease of Four. in Utah is shown In the Prosperity fact that business failures during the first six months 4 of 1916 totaled from last year. only 43, a decrease of The total indebtedness is reported by Dun Vienna, July 9. Ferdinand Drabina, & Co. at $346,477. In the eight westa young man who emigrated to the ern states Nevada is the exception to an increase in failures. United States in 1907, and who after show In the eight states comprising Mona varied career as waiter, hotel porter, tana, Wyoming, Colorado, New laborer in the gold mines in Colorado Mexico,Idaho, Arizona, Utah and Nevada, and salesman, settled down in 1912 as a failures totaled 222, compared with 254 in the corresponding period of last correspondent for a banking firm (H. year. Total indebtedness is reported nt Clausenius & Co.,) in Chicago, has just $2,464,003, as compared with $2,811,176 been sent to prison for two years and in 1915. Ausa half for obtaining money from Nevada alone reported an increase in trian banks on falsified orders from the number of failures, while the liabilities were about $450,000 heavier In in America. A part of the business of the banking Colorado and $120,000 or more larger both in Nevada and Utah. The expanfirm that employed Drabina was the sion in these states, however, was more transfer of money from emigrants to than offset by the reductions elsewhere, Austria-HungarThe their families in Montana alone disclosing a contraction close to $300,000. There were 9S young man conceived the ideas and at of reverses in this section his first opportunity carried it out, of fewer business the second quarter cf this year making the orders payable to himself during than in the first quarter, while the rather than to the stipulated payee. amount involved was smaller by $1,000,-00The drafts thus falsified he mailed to is the comparative Following a "coworker" here in Austria, and in statement: Austro-Hungaria- ns y. 0. the summer of 1914 he followed the bogus paper across the Atlantic. After collecting several thousand kronen 17,000 In the city of Ostrau alone he took lodgings with a humble family, and by means of his apparent wealth succeeded easily in infatuating the daughter. When, however, he threw her over and took up with another charmer she denounced him to the police as a "suspicious American" who had no. visible means of support, and who must have something to conceal because he had never gene through the necessary formality of registering with the police. An Investigation resulted that has only been concluded with Drablna's j ed Forty-thre- e SWINDLER Only All Was Going Nicely Until He Jilted Austrian Girl. t Number. Liabilities. 1916. 1915. 1914. 1916. 40 36 32 $301,037 44 37 34 180,892 7 10 13 23,472 63 68 59 1,315,005 14 15 17 101,007 7 19 20 33,778 43 47 40 346,477 11 15 16 10,335 Montana Idaho Wyoming Colorado New Mexico Arizona Utah Nevada West .. ",....222 254 231 $2,464,003 ELKS' HOME DEDICATED. Bedford City, Va., July 8. The new national home of the Elks was dedicated here today with Judge Jerome Fisher of Jamestown, N. Y., past exacted grand ruler, August Herrmann of Cincinnati, and Governor Stuart of as the principal speakers. Th Virginia home cost $500,000. . |