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Show r- i J t , DESERET EVENING NEWS JUST KID -- T OF 1 , THURSDAY- II - DECEMBER"20fol7 It Isnt Necessary to See to Believe ; x - - By Ad Carl r. - n v. i FLEERS jk ' x ' CHICAGO HE 5 A BUU, POP AH lGxT H CS fit AS ' ( -V. J A - wl-- j A '' Lf. -- ..I v- - a, i. : f, at ttmoo la th Coma bond and Federal Trade Commission ing between th Yardnr aad Lako Lot ran." Indicates Inquiry For the Germans Concentrated Op. Monte Solarolo Purpose of Finding Out Rota. Tuoaday. Doc. II. Italian war Facts ' , ffle Issued tba , today CORPORATE AFFAIRS BEING INVESTIGATED Prince of Boston Holds 79,900 Shares as Trustee; Never Had Them in Pos F. H. session. i Washington. Dee. It Effort, of th federal trod commission to dlaeovet the real owSershipJ of th Chicago gioekyards and Tormina) Railroad bo-(- n today with an inquiry into cor-pera-to rolatioa botwoea th Chicago .stockyard company, the Union Stock- yard d Transit company, the Chicago JUH' min Bl1w)ajtnil Unto ilock- yard company and tka Chicago Junct- ion Ratlwaya frank R-- -- P.sram, treaaurer of the Stockyard company and C. H. Prince of Boston. testified ihaf be held W.Mt share of th Chi. ewto Stockyard company as trust, but, Iliad, be had sever had them In hu Th otock was held, be possession said, subject to bearer warranto, but that he did aot know where those war thara were In the safe deposit boxes of )dr and Mra. Prince Other witnesses aramoned' to include W. M Wadden, former testify trees-- orer for the Chicago Stockyards company. P fL Hart, vice chairman of the M4 Colony Trust company, E. V. R. of th Chase National "Thayer,& president H. 8eeenden, a broker; C. C. bank; base, auditor for the Chicago Stock-yar4 Transit company J N Manning. an employee of Prince 4 Co. AU are from Boston except Mr Thayer who formerly tired ia Boston but now New York P W Oroll, confidential secretary to J Ogdea Armour also has been sub- Spat 4 poenaed. Mteutee of find Meeting. Certified minutes of' thy firwt meeting of the Chicago Stockyards company on Sept. 27 If 11, were introduced to give details of an agreement breer Pegram and the company. The minutes recited that Pegram: bad attained the asset of the holders of 6ft.. (,tii shares of the common stock of the Chicago Junction railways and Union Mockjards company to a plan formu-Mt- d br a committee beaded by Richard I OMey as following atate-mn- t: "Yoaterday th seventh day of th halt) btwon th Bronte and th Plavo, the enemy eoaeontratad hi effort almost eacluaivaly on th Moat Solarolo salleaC At 11 after boura of the most violent fir extending from th Col della Orto to SU?B- - columns of Infantry rroia th aorthsant nod th northwest launched against oor position he former which advanced from th southeastern slop of Moat Spin-by fir from our arandcaght from Breech batteries It tillery was forced to stop aad gfvs up the attack befor getting ka contact with our tint 'Tt1 latter, consisting of a who! dmsioa of GormmA troop, preceded by maoeult detachment, made a direct and decided tbruftt tfaimt Mom Bolaroto and the northern slope at the heed of the Calcine valley. Oor troops ap A moot etabbora remittance and pot the enemy after a desperate struggle being badly cut op by our fire and worn out by oor counterattack, waa obliged to AuapeAd action and return to bis own lines. We captured pnepcere and eotne machine fvni In the Col della Beret ta region a throat on the- part of the enemy infantry was crushed promptly by our fire. On the remainder of the front the fighting actfvty waa very moderate." ta. Ki-- aev-ar- al - t Sk Zf&J fcrtf 01 Nortvri ty along the front last night. were no Infantry actions" A-- ders oamp aviator Franc ar iJniriheil enthuliticalIy m the Petit Pariaien by Pant Gtnmty. who has jut viaited th camp. ' With th exception ot a few hate he write, all fle pnteri.1 from Ame-lcThe work, wax begun in September under the direction of 1S6 men, expert la varioua branehe. and the driving power which they are putting Into 'heir tank waa evident dn eve y hand. From tht camp fully trained pilot will he aent to the front. French aviators are there to give the benefit of their experiencea. The arrangement which have been made for tha comfort and entertainment of the American aoldiera in a camp are prled by M. Glmatry. wh also ara gr catty Impressed by the highly developed admimatrati ve - organ ixation which hu been perfected. He wu especially struck by a table at the aviation ramp which --ecord th progress of each pilot from the time of his light until he is performing acrobatic tricks in the air. tor1 In central a. I BURST MILS Vvaahlngton. Dec. SPRECKELS tA Foundation for the sugar ahortag wu laid wkiln held large IOck February. by sensational atoriea of a threatened famine and trike cauaed by the 1 W. W, Earl n. Bahst, president of the American Sugar Refining company. tMkliei today at the sugar investiga-tloHe did not he who believed ay th wu (esponstble for stortea began to hoard, h said, and during the spring aad summer demand, upoa th refiners were unprecedented When consumers began to hoard, retailers raised price, ha ald, but refiner did aot Increase price corre. pondlngly. as they did aot deair to increase the alarm. Added to th near atorl cam reCuban revolution and deport of struction of can fields which d th demand greatly, Ha bet said. Then after stocks becam low there deraw veloped difficulty in getting sugar, and when lt w impossible to th eastern trade with ene supply sugar the car short prevented new beet sugar from being sent ease American consumed too 000 ton more In 1117 than the year previous, Babst said, and 700 000 ton of Cuban sugar usually coming to this country went abroad Ha described the situation with the adage. -- Ton cant uat your cuke and have It too. Th demand a a result of the canning campaign waa enormous he a Id. and added that Instead of sugar being in sugar bowls It is in fruit Jars" Tba etalement of Claus A that his rsflnery could haveSprockets relieved the shortage this fall had th food administration allowed him to pay more than the price set foe Cnban raw sugar, was characterised bv Babst as eamoa-flaThere were prartlrally no supplies left when th reonest wan made he said ond to have paid more for th few thousands tons of raw sugar In Cuba would have destroyed the food afm1nistrtin' effort to keep down er it a. Con-um- tlma-late- COMPLETE IN ONE VOLUME 250 ILLUSTRATIONS. Scenes jam d incidents depicted in the authors masterly, style lead the reader from pre pioneer. days to the year i9i6. : $2.00 postpaid CL0T1IEMR0SSED t mOrocco -- .. $2j;o postpaid Deseret News Booh Store g. 'price. TfTK JfKWK DOES JOB PfTTTTTTO How la your stock of Let tsr Heads Envelope. Bill Hssd 'and other office supplies Let ns figure with yen on blank book a certificates, booklets or In fact anything ta ths printing Tn- TH DESERET VFWg JOB DEPT. Mato Strsst V ( 1 6 MAIN STREET. attor-luomn- - Pgr!. Tuesday Dec. 12 The wonof a vaat American train inc 'Utah i f .If--' morn-chteJ5- ANNEXATIONS Popular History 71 H-f-ee Col-to- ATteview of a Document Recently Issued by the United States Government. c WHITNEYS V. A '' GERMAN WAR PRACTICE! You cannot find a more" appropriate to present to your parents, relatives or friends than a copy of $ ..t i There 1 E IE S. JUDGE Th local lhrmomtr mae a record Wednesday afternoon, when, at 3 oclock, th mercury touched 61 degree. equal to the Wgbeirt previous William Johnson, arrested several local record for December, which was Gunn Wyo., after a search In 1874. the year the Salt Lake weather days agos.it office wa opened.. But yesterday was of near! eight month by federal of4 because ficers, pleaded guilty today to three more remarkable than 17 then the 41 degree occurred on the counts chaiging him with counterfeitfirat of December, whereas this second ing when taken before Judge Tillman record occurred Dec. 1 The thermometer today is not eo high because of a Johnson for arraignment. wind from the northwest, the therHe ts charged with hating counter mometer ranged up to noon from 4ft to feitiog Apparatus in bis 4ft degree The rang one year ago with forgiiig coins therewith,possession: and for Wa 26 to 32 degrees with nearly four count arfeit his in ikmuhuijuoii having when Inch of snow Owing to the appreaoh coins was Johnson arrested. of the high barometric pressure, the Jailed early this eaf on a charge of children after bis five minor owoeertintf and colder tonight followed by clear .. h. ..m Vh.u bndv ha ,k weather again on tha morrow Alien- of tioo ia called to the fact that Modena the University of Utah He a in? at 44 degrees, Pocatello at S8. and Ivnced at that time to six month imTenopah at l degree exceed the lota) prisonment but wa released after .December record. Salt lJhke and five wek-- n the promts that serving equal the highest, he would contribute to the car of hi 64 showings degrees He alleged immediately W The highest local temperature for children town Dec 2ft waa (2 degree and have left following h arreaaod )n lift Shortly 104 with lowest maximum 24 degree federal agent began In 10 The local maximum for this on hi caae. having secured date dunnr 1911-1- 4 were 30, 30, 25, working he was engaged in that information 29, 44 and 32 degree respectively The Iver dollar Upon ah lowest local temperature for Dec. 20 counterfeiting William H Davenport, was 4 degrees above aero in 1897 and investigation. service operative hre found a 108, with highest minimum 44 degrees secret the premise formerly in 187 The heaviest precipitation coin mould onJohnson and at a later by locally for this dale was 6 of an inch occupied unearthed in a date City detect! in 181. Coal shed on the same property a metal receptacle containing a number spurious dollar coins. necessary After gathering federal Johnson the dence aft tha be bad been agent from the county JatL They Imbegan a search for him which s BORINO GUILTY mediately I.a at ltd since lyt AprlLin Johnson-waa coal .mine found working recently He wa breugfyt here Tueiat Uunn S marshal from vF ye- -Iday by depulyTT turned over topical governMrs. Lorsnso Borino, of Diamond- official ( ville, Wfit, was today found guilty by ment I pon entering a pla of guilty today. a jury in th United States distrn t Johnson wa asked by Judge Tillman the seriou understood court of violation of the Mann act. The D. Johnson of the orfens with which h jury retired alertly befor noon and nature realised that It if he and was charged presented it verdict of guilty at 12 3ft. meant penitentiary imprisonment. The admitted tb and did he said D. Johnson announced prisoner Judg Tllkoan counts charged all three that a iwtBci would b pronounced truth of him at 1ft Jan. 2 Mrs. Bonne Is an against E 8. David B. Obok, assistant U. th vjffian, wife of the proprietor tins then mad motion that f g saloon and alleged house for sentence be set for tomorrow at Diamondville and is t ing at 1 oclock, whtch tee judge three children. She was grand jury .indictment with having agreed to. caused and effected the transportation of Koaa Pecheke, a Austrian girl from ' her home at Winter Colton it Division , Utah. to Diamondville. for Quarter. T erminus Some Day immoral purposes. During th process of the trial which began Tuesday. Rom testified for the state that she had been Induced by Mra Th management of th Denverhad4 Borino to accompany her to Wyoming Rio Grand ha for several years the pretext that she was to do in mind, when opportunity offered, to housework for the latter It w ..... of Colton on Soldier Summit, a brought out that upon the arrival of make division terminal, with Green Rtvorn Kora Pecheke at Diamondville eh wa as the othr end of the division, as ork In the kitchen during the will be a very convenient location time but at mg day The in alluring garo and msde to dance in ior TreVghl clsxxificatiosv to Pria.al E. I Brown, uanerai here aaloon-danc the hall conducted by th defendant and her husband WoV-Vt- ai r shown through several wttnesse for Engineer the proposition; hart, a. Assistthe state that men and women fre- about F. ant Genera) Manager Clarity the were served with quented place, noon liquor and that the girls were employed aaidIt this is a dresm that some day will be to dance with the patrons Rosa Pei heke testified that he re- realised, and we would like to see it belled against working in the saloon realised right new; but owing to the of the money market, ti la when Instructed to do so by the defend- condition doubtful if he improvement can be ant The trial opened this morning with made for some time yet. a appeal to the Jury by W W. Ray, U 8 district attorney Thomas fi. Ashworth, attorney, argued for the Two Auto Engines Have defense. 15. EMI i TEMPERATURE LJ Jor-f- Artillery Activity. Descendants of the Pioneers and The Builders ol the Stale s-- yuh Paris. Dec fft Tb official statement issued today by the French war office says There was moderate artillery activi- tiJM K " THAT AlMT ment issued today from British head in France and Belgium. The Suarters ermaa artillery was active la the Yprea sector. wtAr-tb- e 800 PAGES L 1 w London Dec. 2 ft. Port a go ee troope near Laventie. horth of Arras, laaf chairman. It war sard tfrePlan assures f ChiagoJunrtiofi Railways and Colon htockyards company the continuance of ( Continued from page one. in busineee new carried ea the parsers upon a permanent basisbyand a also Indicated from - Berlin that the in greett increase and the value main committee of the reichstag will of the shares of profits stocks" be summoned to meet in session Pegram was recorded ns having in connection with thesespecial negotiations plan and aaeeto and 31 OftO.-- 6 and some German newspapers yrata the interpret cash to the company for thin as showing that the will of the fftd in eommoa stock. Pegram. who representatives la about to aspreviously had testified that his sal- people's itself ary was $2 SOI a year testifed that he sert result of the armistice Is Another k is of the agree meat as pet that nothing Fnsjgn Krylenko, the Bolshevik! in the minutes. furtj has been able to Mr Hart told the dkmimlsslon the commander-in-chie- f, devised Wau there seemed :7.1iV!!,"BK5dIrVl,' ho Report rest danger or th business being dmei away from Chicago to place gaining new successes There confirmation of the report lit no direct further west. Former Premier Kerensky la With other testimony show that th aenutiona) vicinity of Pet to grad with an army,company waa organised th Meanwhile to keep the plants th Bolshevik! adrolnlafrom being moved is adopting drastic methods ay. a latter from 8. H Fessenden, tration a Boston broker who assisted Including th in th arslnst Its opponents of th penalty wan reinstatement ersanliatlon. raid, saying the proFinA dispatch from Tammerform. ceeding waa merely to legalise rebates t peckers no the Russian troops are they might bk "a por- land. says that tion of th plunder to evacuate Finland, their aad preparing hare might Ihdl P transportatiou already having bean arpickings" ranged. Anstrh Pay. Without Advices. At th fodsral trad commis lion 20 Th Russian tnvsstlgstloa of th stock Washington. Dec. Chicago hsru yards F It Hart, ons of embassy today was entirely without ths principal today, in th stockyards advices pf th progress of peace nego- f'gnrs eompany. testified that it had been ttations he! ween the BoUherikl and th agreed te pay J Ogdetl Armour all 'Centra! Powers, and whatever advices the company's earning over per cent, fthe government was reviving through t keep Armour from moving th yard American Ambassador Francis or other 7 from Chicago and further west, sources waa not made public. ofi "jc -i rl .r ' PonT ynow iVWAT ir ts BUT POP 5AYS Hts at i FOR HIGH 1 m&; i&A A- JeKj''? taj GUILTYTO -- .V : tie'll WHAT AM ArCTTGLREE r i, X r of the blackest pages In all comprising a record of deeds that make one despair of tha future of the human race," are found in a book War Practice," named ""German which has just been Issued at ths goyernmentA-prlntlnjoffic by th committee on publlo Information for free distribution. It is edited by Prof. D C Munro. of Princeton, and other ' scholars. The dumbfounding evidence wlleh this book presents to the Jury of mankind is drawn mainly from German and American sources, and include official prociinsattoB and utterance of the responsible heads of the imletters perial German government, and diaries of German soldiers, quotations frori German newspapers, sad material drawn from the archive, of the state department which lay bare the story of inconceivable German atrocities The purpose of ihe book is to show that the svsum of frlghlfulnesv. Itself the greatest atrocity. Is ths defigovernnite policy of the ment. so Siltaer that German soldiers navs themselves at times revolted. Individual acts of wanton cruetly and barbaric dmtmrtion ars cited only to Illustrate The operation of the remorseless system. Supplements Bryce Report. The book supplements th Bryce report which waa th first official survey of the rath of horror, ruin, and death left by th German army on Wie lanes of innocent and defense also people The book ia supplemental to the officut' reports by the Belgian nd tb French minister of foreign affxlr. and it reveals more Prussian system upon those defenseless people. Vernon Kellogg Statement. In a statement prepared Tor the book, Vernon Keilog said I went into Belgium and occupied France a neutral, and I maintained while there a steadfastly nsutral behavior, but 1 cam out no nsutralI went In also a hater of war, but I came out a more ardent hater of war; but, also 1 cam out with Ineradicable convlo-tioagain, shat th only way in which Germany, under it present rule and in its present state of mind can bs kept from doing what it has dons Is by force of arms'1 Th book give excerpts from tns diaries of German soldiers of which these are specimens: In th night of 9 ths village of August waa punished foe having fired on German soldiers by being burnt to th ground by the German Tbs Tillage was surtroops rounded, men posted about from one another, so that no one could get out. Then th Uhlans set fir to it house by house, neither man, woman, or child could eaeape, only tbs greater part of the live stock wo carried off, aa that could be used. Any one who ventured to come out was shot down. All ths inhabitents left In ths village wr burnt with ths SOME g 2L$y Int exwdthroean n, 1S-1- , lwa haint-Miun- bouses. A horrible bath of blood. Th whole village burnt, th French thrown into the blazing bonsew civilians with tbs Policy of FHgbtfnlnean. That the relgd of frightfulnme wa ths definite policy of the German government is testified to by an amazing .cuUscuon of document and utterance ot tirran officialdom. Herewith ere excerpt Xrora documeatAry proof fur- r..Vrnuu records establish- - book an' iv.dfk Organ Benefit Concert " In Seventeenth Ward i , Chrls-tlanae- The sheriff office today received a telegram from Chief of Police IX A. B hits, of San Francisco, advising that an automobile had been located at the coast city bearing the same engine serial number a that of the car owned by C H. Doolittle, which wa stolen in this city several pioattif ago Binoe the loobmiuarrftM recovered soon the shertff is pussied tp wj,y tbw automobile found at Francisco should bear the same The matter w Hi-number iwvesti- gated. Both care are Hudsons. a; t be tr n, i , t ! tet f - , va , I dr ,S!7nn - -- Prizes were swarded this moraing, 4 haiji for themsely; U11 mighty in tradition "r- at the show of the Utah Poultry asso- ciation Mh name ot to Arthur Lena, A. H. Hanie V no Chine ever that hai) ideda axain cock. W. H. Maxwell, Hyrum Sessions 'k,. fhT 40 Of l!a askance. . of Bountiful, Dan Duncan. T. M, PenRussians slaughter of i rose for Singlo Comb Redk; Eugene Uffg th, way for KulIuronc4 for From the Kaisers speech to the. Margetts, silver bantam; A. J. Saun-- L soldiers on the' eve of their departure dera, Hamburg. E. T. William. for China in 1900. Woods Cross, for Brown Leghorns: M. Whenever a national war breaks H. Mann. Woods Cross, Whit Plynecessary mouth Rocks; George Canfield, 8. O. The Illuminating reports of Brand Genral VoB Day, of Salt Lake, Tonnes Cutler and Whitlock, minister to Belgium, tell of Don Carlos Smith of Midvale, Barred miseries Inflicted upon the Belgian Bruyeeia ekeluslve of Plymouth Rocks, W D. Gibhart, Murc',y people, Mr. Whitlock saying: "On ul., ray. White Plymouth Rocks, Owen bT so overwhelmed with the horror of th Additional fine of 5.000.000 on Tucker, F. H. Sorenson, George Soffe thing Itself, that it ba. been, and even Aecou,,t of the attack madefranc, and J. A. Adamson for Ancona. a upon now la difficult to write calmly and German soldier by Kyckere, one of its justly about it.' Luett-wltBaron Von police officiate Hoovers Oplnkm. governor of Brussel. Herbert Hoover, writing for this I am thirsty; bring ms some beer, book of his experience to Belgium, gin, rum." If you lie to me I will The sight of the destroyed have you shot imiAed lately says: homes and citiea the widowed and sentence are taken from a phrase-boo- k fatherless, the destitute, the physical supplied to German soldiers, acmisery ot the people but partially cord ins to Minister Brand Whitlock. nourished at best, the deportation of One cannot make war in a sentimen by tens of thousands to slavery mental fashion. The more pitiless th in German mines and factories, the conduct of the war, the more humane execution of men and women for pal- it ia in reality, for it eill rnn its course try leffuWofts of their loyalty to their all the sooner." General Von Bern country, jthe sacking of every resource hardL through financial robbery, th fatten"The Innocent must suffer with th ing of armies on the alender produce guilty. , Ail this must not In of the country, the denudation of the oor eyas weigh as much as the life of (Continued from page one ) country If cattle, ijorses. and textiles: a single one of oor brave soldiers 11 theecj things we had to witness, the righteous accomplishment of duty guagds ore fighting In th streets her 'dumb tel help other than by protest is the emanation of a Kultur. and today. sympathy, during this long and in that the populationhigh ad of th enemy The Opera house.- - headquarters of terrible time, and still these are not can learn a lesson from our the Ukrainians, has been, equipped th eventjs of battle heat, but the ef- countries " General Von Biasing with machine gnns. which hate been fect of a grinding beet of a race de- armies e theJEom-mtttaddress To get th book, turned on the BoishevikL who are remanding the mastership of ths world. on Public Information. 10 plying with rifle fir. All these things are known to the C. D. Place. Jaeksnn Washington. Botehevikl troops have surrounded can never what be known world but ot German War some Ukrainians at the railway la the dumb agony of the people, the qeeettng one copy r All business in the city has been Practice. expression lees faces of millions whose suspended. The troops on both side souls hav passed th whole gamut of 11 cut tetephon and telegraph wires emotions. And why? Because these, VOLrVTKRR irsviert. in ths and there ts great a free and democratic people, dared In Franc. disorder.city proper th American With Army bodies befor their the march Dee. 70 plunge Associated the Pres). (By The Ukrainian rebels machine gnns of autocracy." Frederick C. Walcott's description Th officers of the Russian army la are accurately Aralnrd on the BoTshe-vik- l in the city s two Franc hav volunteered as a body to of devastated Poland comprehend headquarters the monstrous woes inflicted by the give their services t th United Statea principal oafea. mthf 21 r"T Li- A grand organ benefit concert will n- be gHen tomorrow night In the i I i Seventeenth ward chapel. First North between West Templft and First West treets, beginning at 2 16 o clock The concert will be under direction of Ar- the ward thurF. Barnes,- president pf choir, and thq program will consist of 13 numbers. Among the performer will be a male quartet, composed Mr-Automobile Left Hanging of Jams H. Neilson, Hyrum J Harold W Xangton and Amer lit ri n Over. High Coping Almond, piE Hanson, Miss Becky on the by organ anist, accompanied An automobile hanging by the Prof. John J. McClellan, who will also give a demonstration of the organ wheel from a coping to front of 155 will Mias Geneva Harris Johnson north Main street today presented play a piano solo with violin obligato grotesque spectacle to pasaere- by Mis Fa Lambert. Prof. Willard I moit Little ot the story could be Welho wlU play a violin solo and vocal ; by. by Hyrum i. gleaned from resident in the vicinity solo, will be given J. Christiansen and Jaqnes H. Neilson, excepting that tb machine had run 5 ( tenors. Prof Anthony C. Lund, bari- over the sidewalk coping, where tb , so-of the street about is Id Miss grading tone, and Ethelyn Walker, , the adjoining property. prano A trio composed by Mua Fa above The accident occurred at noon on Kj Lambert, violin. Mine Helen Howard, owned G. Felt. The J. ear will Blanch by and property Austin, piano, cello, belonged, it is thought, to render a selection; Miss Lucille Howe ain question Mr. Clark and was driven, it ia will play a piano solo and a chorus Li will be sung by th choir, under di- - saidjiy a young man, who escapedside-Eof James H. Neilson. with MbwTury. The car jumped from tb J Olsen at 'ths organ. Bishop walk into the lane below bat ?M v caught by the wheels os they passed J V Franklin 8. Tingey will make a brief over the coping and held suspended on address. the walL As fur aa could he learood. it was not damaged. It waa. removed from It precarious poeitioa by a jaek Prizes Are Awarded At Utah Poultry Show 'rmblorV ii Same Serial Nufnber uat tnofKl lit qwh mthv mivuguvut ... riviiirxi world. Th humanity which th tftri s h T.i m uumTb r, ? plp Alleged Petty Thieves. Joe Eastman, 29 years of age, and Jack Wayde, 12, were arrested Uat night by Patrolmen Crow and Merrick, charged with the theft of jewelry valued at about 54 from lames store on lower Main street. New Suits Filed. THIRD DISTRICT COURT. Arthor L. Armstrong against Theresa Vivian Armstrong, divorce cruelty. Milne Spencer against Victor F. Spencer, divorce crue.ty (United Electric Tramway company L. R Marrlngton, to quiet UUe ' agmt to certain property fit; a, .This aia-tlon- s. In a complaint filed by the county tlliam Gillen ! charged attorney. vlih embexxlemnt of a track jackVX from Oregon bhort Line Railroad competty. oreplafpts acre filed also charging Ray hutheriand, Bert Don ne and Elmer Olsen mth burglary in the second degree The are jslteged to &tft hutaostli fully ehtered premise at I d-- la Main street t Job Printing RINDING and all Linds of RULING - - done at the - DeseretNews HU Lt Us in Your Work Si H'.r 3 ?,5i S .'HT i !! Di i 1 yj- a A 1 : |