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Show EVENING NEWS DESERET JULY 26 1919 SATURDAY VI OB IM 1 Application we made with the etate engineer, Georg F. McGonagle, today, for the uee of 70 aecond feet of 4 water from the Jordan river to Irritate (.000 acree in the aouth end of Daria county. Application waa aleo filed on a like amount of water from Utah !akty no that. In the event of the river water be Inf already appropriated, aa refarda the direct flow In extremely dry oeaaona, the farmer win etill have water to Irrigate their lands. The application provides for a diversion canal one mile long and for pumping plants to raise the water to the higher levels of the banks of the Jordan river. The water la to be taken from the extreme easterly channel of the Jordan. The application ie signed by II. 8. Joseph, J. Fred Odell snd H. B. Parkin, a committee elected at a representative meeting of farmers In the district to carry ..auLthe. project. --At the meeting of July 20, Flan Hatch, of Woods Cross,'- - Robert EMredgs of West Bountiful end Charles R. Mabey, of East Bountiful were appointed ee an advisory committee to aealst the elected committee. Mr. Joseph announees that wdrk on the proposed diversion works started this morning, plows and scrapers being set to work under the direction of Fred Cleverly to construct ths diversion channel. This is, of course, abject to the approval of the application by the state engineer, but the farmers desire to rush ths project with all possible speed, so that nothing on their part may delay its com. pletion. Mr. Jeeeph aleo assert that the farmers are lready-organised and that toe names have been attached to the petition for the formation of the Bonneville Irrigation district, which will be organised to finance the preposition. Only 10 names are required, under the etate law to bring the matter before the county eomraiasionera The aim here, also. Is to rush the metier through- - without any unnecessary delay, and money has already been subscribed by the farmers under the project for the preliminary expenses including the bond required for the election that will be held in the district In accord with the lew. The application avers that the farm-e- ri ere not represented In any manner by W..A. Stumm, who also has filed on JO second feet from the Jordan river tu about the seme locality to irrigate 10,000 acree of the earns lend. They deny that .they have authorised Mr. Stumm to represent them In naming this lend, end at the meeting they said that they proposed to handle the matter themselves instoed of through Mr. Stumm. A. T. Capener represented the prior application at the meeting of the farmers which waa held July 20. . 4 , K -- - -a- - CHOSEN IS Gil JORDIII RIVER WATER KISITINGM TO IRRIGATE LINDS YOUNG COUPEE NATIONAL GUARD NTRT FILING -p- - I Chief Puts Ban on . SflioArm in Garaget Efforts are to be made by officiate of the local Are department to enforce tt city ordinance prohibiting smoking In garages, aooordlng to Fire Chief W, U. By eater. While this rule has been observed- - quite well in the past, the Are chief says employee end others are becoming careless and Jhat the violation are becoming more oommoit ' than heretofore. . As the Arat step In this campaign Chief Bywater appeared In the city police court this morning to prosecute the case of Joe Yard as, 22 years old, who was arrested at the Cullen garage by the chief and Fir Inspector Harry Rohlns Wednesday,, for this . offense. Yerdas was found guilty 'a charged and after giving him a severe reprimand and warning him against a repetition of the offense. Judge W. H. Wilkins Imposed e An of ltd with the alternative sentence of 10 days in the city jail. t Four men who faced Judge Wilkin on charges of drunkenness pleaded guilty and were eentanoed to a Ane 20 of ISO each or serve days each In, the city jail. They were Mike Joyce, J. Lynch, James Branigan and Morris Calla J. Rust, found guilty of stealing a suitcase from a room at the Eldora hotel, wee sentenced to serve 20 days In the city jail. DR ARREST PLACED t, BIG BIFEE SHOOT LAKE The following automobile tourists registered at the Utah Automobile association headquarter at the Commercial club today; F. W. Conelerny, Dodge, party of I. Olympia, Wash., to Yellowstone perk end return; T. F. Williams, Dodge, party of 2, Lo Angeles to Denver; E. A. Terry. Ford, 2. Dallas, Texas, to Yellowparty stone; Charles W, Rowan, party of 0, Ban Diego to Cheyenne; A. H. Carter, Bcrlpps Booth, party of 2, Denver to YeTlowstone pirk; C. Audren, Oakland. party cf I- - Courtland,' Kansas to Seattle; M. Wood, Maxwell, party of C. to Seattle; 4, Aurora, Kansas Masey, Hudson, party of i, Billings, Oklahoma to Los Angeles; A. L. Bauls, Valle, party of 2 making the same trip; W. H. English, Cadillac, party of 2,' Saa Francisco to Cody; W. C. McMullen, 8tsdebaker, party of 2, Nile, Nevada, to Salt Lake and return; J. A. McElklnney, Hudson, party of 4, Oklahoma to San Francisco; J. W. Newcomb, Saxon, party of 1, San Francisco ,to Iowa; W. G. Mason, Faige, party of 2, Ely to Boise; Lester Grant, Hudson, party of 4, San Francisco to Colorado- - Springs; Henry VenA. Robbins,- - Liberty, arty-of-2, tura to Ogalala; Frank Miller, Ford, party of 2, Lafayette, Ind., to Los Angeles; R, C. Hard ", Ford, party- of 4, Cheppowee Falls, Ml., to Seattle; W, J. Sharkey, Oakland, party of I, San Francisco to Denver; Edward J. Madden, Cadillac, party of 2, Detroit to Lo Angeles; T. B. Thomas, Ford, party of 2, Denver to San Francisco. FDR IS When Clifford Kummer of Park The Utah National Guard rifle team which wlll compete In the National City and Maggie Thompaon of Hebor Rifle matches at the navy rifle range, city ppUed at the office of the New Jareey, commencing derg for a marriage 11 cense this Monday, Aug. 25, will leave Sait Ink Jauntng they were sadly disappoint-o- a dl-- 4 in their expected venture as an Aug. 4. The teen win travel rect to the field so as to get sever!', 0fSosr from the sheriff office we and placed them under ar days practice on the rang prior to rest. " Advlo had been received that the matches. The team will he oompoesd of .the die young couple were under the legal following members: eg and should, they .apply n license Major Fred Jorgensen, A.. C, de- should be denied them. partment, team eaptaln; Ma joe' John The young man gave bis age as IT 8. Earley. C. M. C.; Capt wyjUm L. and th girl admitted eh had jaet First first A, cavalry; White, troop 12. them turned Accompanying Lieut. Drown E. Blasdel, troop A, first were Georg Thorp and his wife, of O. Truman Lieut. Second to assumed who stand cavalry; park City, Marlsr, troop B, first cavalry; Bergt.- sponsor for th young man, but nevRobert L Irvine, troop A. first eaval- ertheless they will be held until farry; Bergt. Fred C. VanBuren, troop. tber ed vice can bd received from A, first cavalry; Sergt. John P. Lam-- 1 their parents, who ere on the way to bsrt. troop A, first cavalry; Sergt. this city. Robert W. Richardson, .troop A, first cavalry; Sergt Delbert W. Thomas, W. troop A, first cavalry; Corp. Mark Cram, troop B. first cavalry; Horee-boOscar P. Hurst, troop B, first class, . Leo cavalry; Prlvsts, coun-Caldwe- ll, j ' 'Member Federal Resources More Than $11,000,000 Reserve System J 1 pnt I H,- I im I Siiiu m Mil - lift null! mm IMP! u hr ill! -- ITIHi Founded 1859 ' Incorporated 1903 er W. Pack, ,lrt B. " first troop. cav- alry; private, first clans, Sidney E. Gilchrist--, troop B.' first cavalry; rivate, first class, John P. Dumka, troop B, first cavalry; private, first class, To serve warrants for th arrest of Frederick W. Bredemeyer, troop A, first cavalry; .Private Howard Ellis, MBs. Ailoe J. Harris and her son troop B, first- cavalry. . Leland and Eugene Harris and The tea it naptaln will designate L. Tack man, accused of comfrom the foregoing list the teem coach, team quartermaster, 12 principals and plicity In ths murder of J. K. Cone, a two alternates. rancher of Trout Creek, W. A. C Bryan. county attorney of Juab county, -Missionary Farewell AndDan Martin,' sheriff 'Of Juab oouiv-ty- , arrived la Salt Lake today. They Bor Mies VilateE. Ron caDed on Sheriff John Oorieee. A farewell testimonial win be given Warrant for the arrest of ths four ns wers leeuedon th . findings in the ' twentieth ward chapel, Beo-on-d tbs coroner's jury. Th parties unavenue and K, Street, Monday arrest will be kept - hers ly evening July, 22, in honor of .Miss as there is no Jell in their Vllate E. Rose prior to her departure :tkm of ths- country. Th sheriff for a m lesion In th Northwestern d hi party, left Trout Creek at states, i The following program, oclock this morning and mad the which will commence at 1:19 oclock, over the desert here in good time. after which there .will he dancing: trip v I Select Iona, , Evans trio. Grace, ClaJr and Margaret Evans; saxophone solo, Min Marioneaax and Mr. Den Janeon; quartet, Utah-Idah- o ' Rue Manghan Married Sugar club; 'piano solo, Mis Mina recitation, Gladys Pederson; Lulu Pen rose; contralto solo, Mias Miss' Janice Marloneaux. daughter Jessie Evans; tenor solo. Dr. Wm. R. Marion-eauWorley, end soprano eoio, Mr. Della of Judge and Mrs. Thom a and Rais Maughan. desk clerk Daynes Bandera at th Hotel Utah, and eon of Mr. and Mrs. A. V. Maughan, of 52 east Fire in Vacant, House. First North street, wer married at Farmington Wednesday night Th Fire of unknown srrgtn was dis- young people announced their marcovered early this morning In a va- riage to thetr families Thursday cant bouse owned by the Kimball A morning, receiving parental .blessings . oa - th Richards . company . at . Kensington and congratulation - - happy , avenue end Park street. Th flames event groom has but recently receivwere under- - considerable headway by edThe discharge as a lieutenant In th time th fir department . ar- ths hie Mrs. Maughan has rived and much difficulty was ex-- , beenaironservice, of th enthusiastic- workers Th In th Salvation perleneed in conquering them. army fund drive and damage is estimated by Fire Chief W. has taken a prominent part In Red H, Bywater at approximately $2,000, Cross war activities. - of Walker Brothers Bankers a story of onward movement. Year after year; for sixty years, its resources have grown, its personnel increased, its activities expanded. story 'pHE I is Edward tem-rarl- Bur it has one changeless characteristic its invulnerable stability. This bank always - has been dependable and able to serve , its customers well. x, Walker Brothers Bankers -- - i Major Kirtley Coming Home Watering Turns as Usual Here "Watering turn come around aa usual to beetgrowers in Gunnison Valley. Witv an ample supply to meet all needs, the progress of the sugar beets in' this fertile section has been' more than satisfactory.' This' year's yield' should reach between 85,900 and 40,000 tons enough to keep the factory run . ning'at capacity for ninety days or more. Keep Up Bond Buying Habit r Daring the wer you systematically set side from your regular Income an Investment fund FOR BOND PURCHASES. reimburse bond purchasers for much' more then the amount of the loan. Bondholders run no risk. t, in this company offer you an unusual opportunity to continue this profitable habit and at the earn time receive large returns with absolute safety. First Mortgage I . Gold Bond These Bonds era. hacked by ALL th physical properties, capital and etrnlngs of th company. Th machinery and equipment aloni are worth several times the amounts of. the. Bond - Issue, and,- - if necessary, could easily be disposed of to Stockholders la the company have .already purchased more than $2 10,000 worth of these Bonds. Less than $00,000 worth are etill available. These you may obtain at 00 cents on the dollar. They are redeemable aerially In from two to ten Years at 100 rents on the dollar and have an actual taralng power of 9.8 per cent approximately twice as much Interest ee government bonds hear. -- Keep up your bond-buyin- In your reservation habit. g for-bon- da today.' bend. Major H.. P. Kirtley of the U. S. Medical Corps, who has been attached to the American general bocgrital in If Bela Kun Government. v Parle for the past year, teiegrapned his family In this city that he Is now Is Ejected Allies Will en rout to Ooeen Park. California, Miss where Mr. Kirtley. formerly Lift Hungarian Blockade Jean Odell of this city Is located and will pass through Salt Lake City on PARIS, Jnty By Th Assothe Lob Angeles limited gotng ciated Press) The supreme council Sunday afternoon. of the peace conference decided this afternoon to send a communication to For Injuries. Sait, the Hungarian people, advising them that if they reject the Bele Kun govDamages in th sum. of $69,000 is ernment and Institute a government asked by Archibald . Anderson in n with which the conference can deal suit filed In ths United. State district the blockade will be lifted and food coart this morning against ths Utah relief provided. Ths oomplxtnt alFuel company. leges that on May $1, 1010. Anderepn Hie Underpaid Professor. was Injured In th Winter Quarters coal mine by being bumped by a train of mine ears. Th complaint CAMSRIDGE. Mnse July 2$. Salalleges negligence on the part of th aries of many assistant Instructors and fuel company In that no signal system or lights glvtng warning of th ap- some instructors ak Harvard university proach of errs In th min wea -mein- - ere lower than wages paid to street made tained. carmen, according to figure public today In connection with the $10,000,-000 of plana for a Cooler Weather Forecast announcement endowment fund campaign. In a of roll of $1,000,000, two-thi. It waa a trifle cooler Inst nigh, and salary which Is paid to members of ths facth went her offlo says It wiH b etill ulty of arts and sciences, some tnstruo-tor- s receive lees than $1,000 a year more so tonight, so people can steep some assistants receive as low better. Sunday will be dear. It has While as $509. to far the been getting hotter south, with Phoenix. Aria, chronicling 110 for this record in th Temple For O. E. S. year degrees, ths country north of th Mexican border. SEATTLE, Whsh.. July 25. Conlocal maximum wag 07 deFriday grees, with a few drops of rain early struction of a temple costing at least for safeguarding perma$1,000,000 yesterday, amounting to a precipita- nent records of th order was recomtion of .02 of an inch. Omaha got to the triennial assembly of soorched yesterday, with OS degrees, mended' Order of and Grand Junction th same. Th the General Grand InChapter, session here toStar, government forecast for this region, the EasternGeorg M. Hyland, most by July 22 to Aug. 2 Inclusive, Is fair with day, grand patron. The session was normal tempervture for this latitude, worthy with occasional showers In New Mex- devoted to business of the order. ico and ' northern Arliona. rd . s' Eaiier For Inventors. V BRUSSELS, Friday, July, 25. (Ry the Associated Press.) The membersof the patents section of th inter- CHURCH NOTICES convention now The quarterly conference of Pio- national research held Sunday, July meeting her reached an agreement neer stake wUL-hwill open in the the establishment of an 27. 'The patent bureau for the stake hell at 10 Lm, while the after- Ion of Inventor, who are now handinoon meeting will be held In the Tabernacle and th evening meeting In capped by oostly and widely differing the stake hall, commencing at 0:30. jlaws of the various countriesof Under these new arrangement pone Special music ha been arranged for the nathe occasion and it is expected there laws would be changed so farbutaseacn are concerned, will he addresses by representatives tive Inventors of th general authorities and stake country would subscribe to an interAll members of the stake national arrangement protecting forofficers eign inventors are invited' to be present . The Granite stake monthly priesthood meeting will be held at th V4sy sM stake tabernacle on Sunday, July 27, Yesterday at 2 p.m. la connection with the regular services th following special office Temperature at weatheronbureau of meetings will be held: Home missionofkiosk. Instruments roof aries at 12 m- - council of seventy, and In 142 feet higher than, those - kiosk; fice . , presidencies of eldsra and special misRoof of sionaries at 1 p.m. Boston Bldg. Kiosk. yesterday .... .T. ...... .101 The High Priegts of Liberty stake Maximum M ttmum yesterday.. .....73. ........ 71 will hold their regular monthly meet- Minimum ...... ..71 today ....... ..74. ing on Sunday, July 27. at 10:20 a.m.. 4 am. today 74. ....... .75 In th First ward chapel. 7 am. today ....... .....75., ....... 71 t a.ra. today ..........7.7S:.....,74 Newell K. Whitney "will he th 75 74 I am. today speaker at the Sunday services in En- 1 0 anv t oda y ........... .72. ..... ,.75 .51 . ......54 sign ward, coratnencing at 0:45. The 1 1 am. t oday II ,15 public ie cordially invited to be pres-ea- t. Noon today Data at 13i3S poa. (Noes See Ties) i Dry thermometer ....... 51 Wet thermometer Advertisers should use th News if they desire to reach Lee I Fereceat. western states in th 'people of Tonight generally fair; cooler to. their borne. night. Relative humidity, II per aaC , a. first-sessio- The Weather , Semi-Week- th. . ly WASHINGTON, D. C- - July 22. In -- and thirteenth centuries a literature connection with the recognition of the i unparalleled after Rome before the age of England and France, In full sovereignty of Iceland, recently golden character drawing, in passionate draaccorded by Denmark, by which the matic power, in severe, fioble aim- -' island enters the Danish federation qn pliclty. In grimViumor. All the of the Sagas live and mow toequal terms with 'Denmark, the National Geographic society, has issued day. Every hill and headland and from its Washington headquarters the valley In the Island Is full of their following bulletin, based on a com- presence. The Icelander of today munication from Jon Stefansoon. knows them by heart. It Is as If Geographically and - geologically every Englishman; from pauper! to Iceland 1s a part of a continuation of king, knew Shakespeare's historical the British Isles, for it is situated plays end could retell them more or on the same submarine mountain less in his or her own words It has ridge, stretching from southeast to kept the national spirit alive through northwest across the north Atlantic. evil times. It has preserved th lanIt is not a bleak, arctic guage almost untouched by time end in thick-ribbe- d ice, thongh Its intercourse. .Yet this literary aorthernmoet peninsula, Rifstangl. foreign people still live in a pastoral and a mile of north Arctic th projects Homeric civilization, which is a modCircle. No country on earth of equal ern lesson of the healthfulness of husis contains so varied and wonderful man life lived in close contact with the phenomena. The glaciers of Switzer- free, wild life of nature, such as land; the fjords, salmon rivers, and would have delighted th heart of midnight sun of Norway; the volca- Rousseau or Thoreau. noes, grottoes, and so If stars of Italy, - For 400 year Iceland was an arisoa a grander seals; the mineral tocratic repubUc, ruled by the great springs of Germany; th geysers of families of the early settlers, atnohg New Zealand; the largest waterfall, whom waa a Norse queen of Dublin. next to Niagara, in the world all A 14 open-a- ir parliament of all are here. Nowhere has nature been Icelanddaysmet annually in June at to spendthrift in giving a geological ThingvelUr, end the speaker of th lesson to man. If there be sermons in law reolt stones, volumes lie unread here. Her from memory the wholeuedt Ihe of unwrltwe see her titanic forces at work ten elaborate la we of the to building up a country. Nowhere ia it the assembly. In 1202-12(- 4 country Ioeland poasibl to study so well the geological united to Norway, and In 1280 conditions prevailing toward with Norway to Denmark. The Danish of the Glacial Epoch In Europe. rule lulned Iceland has another and greater but since th the Island economically, claim to ones interest It la, a Wil- ment and the granting of of the liam Morris said, the Greece of the old parliament. In 1274, at Reykjavik north. It produced in the twelfth great progress has been made. went to his aid. Witnesses of th ceremony say Gen. McGlachlln kissed the young women on both cheeks aft-e- r the French custom Van Norden and Mias are E the first and only women Ely welfare workers with the First division to' receive the Croix de Guerre. WITH THE. AMERICAN ARMY Approve Haywood Bond. OF OCCUPATION, June 27. (CorAssociated the of Press). CHICAGO, respondence July 2$. Bonds of ( s.- Miss Cora Van Norden, of New York City, a Salvation Army welfare 000 for the release of iWRllam D. Haywood, convicted eecre--ta- ry worker with the First division, and Blg ofBiir the Industrial Workers of the Miss Gertrude Ely, of Bryn Mawr, by Federal Penn.,- in charge of Y. M. C. A. ac- World, were approved Alschuler today. He probably tivities with the Eighteenth Infantry, Jude be will released from the federal prie- were decorated recently with th Croix 8e Guerre by General Andrieu, on at Leavenworth, Kan., Monday, hearing on appeals taken commander of a French Infantry di- pending and 91 other 1. W. W.s oon-by-' vision, on behalf of the FYenoh gov- himself ernment. Th ceremonies took place rioted before Judge Land la a year ago." at Montatwur, near the edge of the Bridgehead, headquarter of the First THE VITALITY OF MOKMONISM division. By Dr. James E Tahnage. General Andrieu also presented the Croee of a Chevalier of the Legion of of Just issued by The Gorham Press Boston, Mass. Honor to CoL William F, Harrell, of Comprising 310 pages of "Brief Esthe Sixteenth Infantry, to Cob A. Hunt of the Eighteenth infantry, and to says on Distinctive Doctrine of ths of Jesus Christ of Latter-da- y Sergeant Michael .B. Ellis of the Church ' . Saints." Twenty-eight- h Infantry,, Is a compilation of Dr. After the presentations had been This articles published during th mwde, following the French custom, Gen. Andrieu kissed the American of- past two' years in th great- newspaof the per country. ficers on the check but when the Published to meet an insistent de- general stepped in front of Miss Ely mand for these valuable article in Van and Miss Norden th officer, apform. " ' peared perplexed as to the proper book ' Cloth 1.S0. procedure after a decoration had been DESERET NEWS woman. BOOK to a STORK, presented Maj. Gen. E, F. McGlachlln. com- News --Building. $ Main mander of th First division, quickly , (Advertisement) chai-acte- d region,-embedde- the-eloe- rs W e self-gover- nl - Tal-mag- es V- ' |