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Show THE CITIZEN centerpiece for the table. Red and blue ribbons, with tiny hatchets attached, extended to each place. Individual ices were in the form of busts of Washington. In addition to the guest of honor, covers were laid for Mrs. G. C. Tonks, Mrs. R. Tonks, Mrs. Bert N. Bailey, Miss Blanche Nethercott, Miss Vera Tonks, Mrs. Carl Eddington, Miss Annie E. Plewe, Mrs. Bessie Newman and Miss Trilby Nethercott. . Miss Altha Gladys Beck, daughter of Mrs. Elizabeth Beck, was married on Saturday afternoon to Graham Haven Moore, or Oroville, Cal. The ceremony, which was performed by Professor Levi Edgar Young, took place at the home of the brides aunt, Mrs. Joseph F. Hyde, 377 South Seventh East street. The young couple will be at home in Oroville, Cal. The Utah club entertained at the fifth and last of a series of dances at the Hotel Utah Thursday evening. Members of the Epworth League of the Waterloo Methodist church entertained the members of the Epworth Leagues of the First Methodist and the Liberty Park Methodist churches Thursday evening at the Waterloo motion picture was church. A two-refollowed by refreshments. el The One Step club gave si dancing party at the Ladies' Literary club Friday evening. Kenneth Bourne was chairman of a committee on arrangements. The Salt Lake Mothers club met Wednesday at civic center on Regent street. Luncheon was served at 1 oclock and the meeting followed. Miss Rose Jones of the University of Utah training school spoke on "DesMrs. J. E. potism in Child Training. Jones is the chairman of a commit- tee on arrangements. The Oliver 0. Howard Womans Relief corps held its regular meeting Wednesday afternoon at 2 oclock at the K. of P. hall. Department President Mrs. Agnes Brown of Ogden and other department officers attended. was in the Agadir affair that IT laux was. first accused of CAILLAUX ON TRIAL (Continued from Page 7.) Finance then married Mme. Dupre and her former husband, who had been receiving $280 a year, was appointed an excise officer at a salary of $4,200. Soon afterward Caillaux fell in love with Mme. Leon Claretie and urged his wife to obtain a divorce, but she resisted until 1912. Meantime Mme. Claretie had been divorced and as soon as Caillaux was free they were married. It was his habit of writing letters to his mistresses that proved his undoing. Apparently he was the victim of a weakness which compelled him to make a confidant of some one when great affairs mastered his interest. It was his third wife who slew Gaston Calmette, the editor of Figaro, in 1914, but before that tragic climax came Caillaux had realized his ambition to be premier. He is described as securing the prize by betraying his chief by one of the meanest subterfuges in the annals of French politics. After his falling out with Clemen-cea- u he had been elected to the Chamber of Deputies by his new friends of the radical persuasion and was placed at the head of the largest single bloc in the chamber. As of old, money had lifted him to the pinnacle of political power, but still the final prize remained to be won. to the Ministry Fallieres was President of the Republic. The Premier was Antoine Monis, who was so severely injured in an aviation accix dent, in which Minister of War was killed, that he was forced to keep to his home for some weeks. Several cabinet meetings held at his bedside afforded Caillaux the chance he sought. With all the cunning of Iago he suggested that the scenes were historic and ought to be photographed. When the picture had been taken and reproduced in the newspapers he fostered propogandk in the opposition press against Monis, the argument being that the destinies of the nation should not be committed to a bedridden he returned IN of1911Finance while Ber-teau- statesman. As soon as the campaign was well under way he whispered to President East South Temple being handicapped and endangered by the attacks. Having allowed this hint to burn itself into the presidential consciousness he proposed that he be appointed Premier pending the recovery 139 "Thrift in the Planning of Meals; Right Combinations of the Less Expensive Foods was the subject of a lecture and demonstration at civic center Wednesday afternoon from 2 until 4 oclock by Miss Leah P. Jennings. The Senior Girls of the Nineteenth ward Mutual Improvement association entertained at the second of a series of dances in the Nineteenth ward amusement hall Friday evening at 8:30 oclock. This dance was in the form of a leap year function. ' Cail- playing The Past Guardians club No. 1 of the Utah Neighbors of Woodcraft met Wednesday afternoon at the home of Jeane Bartlett, street. 13 Fallieres that his administration was of Monis. At length President Fallieres said that he would do whatever Monis wished. Off to the residence of the injured Premier the wily Caillaux hurried and informed him that the President desired him to resign. With the letter of resignation in his pocket Caillaux hastened exultingly back to the Elysee Palace and received his appointment as Premier before any other members of the cabinet knew what was in the wind. Germanys hand. Hostile to Great Britain, he was' not content to let the the by inaugurated negotiations to Minister take their French Foreign course, but began secret negotiations with Berlin through the medium of Baron Vn Schoen, German ambassador at Paris. The result was that France was humiliated, Great Britain snubbed and somewhat estranged, and Spain aggrieved. Meantime advance information of the settlement had reached the Bourse and huge sums were won and lost. No sooner had he concluded these negotiations, so unsatisfactory to the French Foreign Minister take their obtain a loan in France of $400,000,000, money which Turkey used only a few months later to wage war against France and her allies. As the result of an investigation by the Senate he was forced to resign the premiership and the succeeding government of Louis Barthou declared the loan illegal. The action was tp no purpose, for Turkey had secured the money. Out of office until the end of 1913, Caillaux was called to the Ministry of Finance for the fourth time in the cabinet of .Doiimergue. The Premier was merely a catspaw for Caillaux, who persuaded him to advocate the reduction of military service from three to two years, and this at a time when Germany had increased her standing army by several hundred thousand men and had imposed an unprecedented tax burden on her people to maintain the new establishment. Gaston Calmette turned AThisonce guns on Caillaux and kept up such a bombardment that the Minister of Finance could hot help seeing the clouds of disaster gather about him. Day after day his secret history was revealed. On March 13, Calmette published a letter which Caillaux had written to Mme. Dupre in the earlier days of their acquaintanceship. It was signed "Ton Jo and supplied the proof in his own handwriting of his perfidious conduct in the income tax affair. The editor, in the same issue, threatened to publish other secret documents. The menace was like a bomb thrown into the Caillaux home Mme. Caillaux believed that Calmette had obtained and intended to publish some of her correspondence. Going to his office on March 16, she shot him to death. Caillaux resigned the Premiership and at the trial, having assured himself that none of his wifes correspondence had fallen into the editors hands,, he challeneged the prosecution to produce the letters Calmette had threatened to publish. He was stunned to learn that the documents were in the German official cipher, signed by Baron Von Schoen, and proved his secret negotiations with Germany at the time of the Agadir imbroglio. As soon as he discovered the truth he withdrew (Continued on Page 18.) p- - Tjggssir nj MAMMON 34 Revolutionary and successful tas was the first Marmon 34 introduced in 1916, with its new principles of light- weight design that amazed the world and led it for three years, it is now surpassed in the new series because of a new motor that taps hitherto undiscovered reservoirs of power, performance and unremitting service. high-efficien- cy . XQEWKXOVZRINGffl J. H. W. Lane R. 8ebree SEBREE & LANE Mining and Industrial Stocks and Bonds Liberty Bonds Bought I Wasatch 4010 335 Main St., Salt Lake City PROBATE AND GUARDIANSHIP NOTICES. Consult County Clerk or the Signers for Further Information. NOTICE. In the District Court, Probate Division, in and for Salt Lake County, State of Utah. In the matter of the Estate of Belle Toliver, Deceased. Notice. The petition of Frederick C. Loof-bouroadministrator of the estate of Belle Toliver, deceased, praying for the settlement of final account of said estate and discharge of said administrator and for the distribution of the residue of the estate, to the persons entitled, has been set for hearing on Friday, the 19th day of March, A. D. 1920, at 2 oclock P. M. at the County Court House in the Court Room of said Court in Salt Lake City, Sait Lake County, Utah. Witness the Clerk of said Court, with the seal thereof affixed, this 27th day of w, February, 1920 ' J. E. CLARK, Clerk. (Seal.) By M. M. Snell, Deputy Clerk. FREDERICK C. LOOFBOUROW, Attorney for Petitioner. NOTICE TO CREDITORS. Estate of Josephine Britanick, de- ceased. Creditors will present claims with vouchers to the undersigned at 400 Boyd Park Bldg., Salt Lake City, Utah, on or before the 24th day of April, A. D. 1920. CORILLA HAMPSON, Administratrix of the Estate of JOSEPHINE BRITANICK, Deceased. Date of first publication, Feb. 21, A. D. 1920. BRIGHAM CLEGG, Attorney for said estate. NOTICE TO CREDITORS. Estate of Frederick John ICevern, d6C6386(lf Creditors will present claims with vouchers to the undersigned at 903 Boston Building, Salt Lake City, Utah, on or before the 24th day of April, A. D. 1920. STANLEY KEVERN, Administrator of the Estate of FREDERICK JOHN KEVERN, Deceased. Date of first publication, Feb. 21, A. D. 1920. J. C. WOOD, Atty. for Administrator. NOTICE TO CREDITORS. Estate of John Harry, deceased. Creditors will present claims with |