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Show THE UTAH BUDGET Following 'mi accident at Gateway. Weber ciinyoa. John Iirinlit, a Union I?u.ific watchman, l'st his right baud tllroUr'" imiputation. Charged Willi the murder of Cecil Holmes" at JUnghani, June 13, 1!H7, ir,l,ur L. Williard has heen released from custody on $10,000 hail. Work is heing rushed on the ternii-n-il of the Utah Coal Route at I'rovo "ml amy le completed soon after September Sep-tember 1, at a cost of more than !?2o0,-000. !?2o0,-000. When the Union Stockyards com-p.Uiy com-p.Uiy of Ogden completes its new unit covering six acres, Ogden will have pne of the largest horse markets in the 'est. The decision of n Salt Lake judge ).ist week was that a man cannot be held responsible for debts contracted by his former wife when he is paying ter alimony. Mike Baca, the 19-year-old Mexican, who killed I'.en Rogers of Logan, has t,een sentenced to forty-five years in the state prison. The crime was committed com-mitted at Ogden. Elsie Thompson, aged 10, while riding rid-ing on the back end of a coal wagon at Salt Lake, dropped from the.wagon in front of a heavy truck, was run over and fatally injured. Vernless Chase, a young employee at the Southern Taeific shops at Ogden, Og-den, had his left hand torn off nt the wrist when that member got caught in the machinery of an electric crane. Suffering from a dislocated ankle received while working for the American Ameri-can Chemical and Ozokerite company at Soldier Summit, Joseph Boleen of Spring City is in the hospital at Prove. The second annual ram sale of the National Woolgrowers' association will be held in Salt Lake from August Au-gust 2S to 31, and it is reported that Intense interest is already manifested manifest-ed in the coining event. Residents of Heber and points in Provo canyon, as the result of a rearrangement rear-rangement of train schedules, may now take a trip to Salt Lake, returning return-ing the same day. In the past it has taken parts of three days to make the trip. Edgar G. Johnston, former bead of the Latin department of the Ogden high school, following several months of controversy with the city board of education, has brought suit against the board for $153 for alleged unpaid salary. Woodsmen of Utah and Idaho and adjoining states are now being invited to enlist in the regiment of lumbermen lumber-men to do service in foreign lauds with the engineers. Men between the ages of IS and 40 are eligible for this sen-ice. The board of education at Ogden has received a number of applications from young women school teachers in the east for positions, and Ogden may next year have a bevy of these young ladies teaching the children of the city schools. Rather than see Salt Lake and the 'ether towns of Utah confronted by a coal famine next winter, it is announced an-nounced that the Denver & Rio Grande railroad will embargo all other freight and devote Its equipment exclusively ex-clusively td the hauling of coal. It is rumored that Mammoth dam, situated high up on Gooseberry creek, which burst and devastated more than thirty miles of Denver & Rio Grande track in Carbon county, never may be rebuilt, hut probably will be replaced by a great dam in Pleasant valley. On August 9, at Lagoon, Davis county will honor the boys who will he,P fight for world liberty in France. Provision will be made to entertain about 200 soldiers, and as a feature f the event, this number of solid gold buttons will be distributed among the men. !t is expected that within two weeks the sugar plant that is under construction at Cornish by the West Cache Sugar company will be completely com-pletely covered, as there are now 225 men at work on the main plant and e immense plant is already partly roofed. Suit has been filed at Salt Lake by i-ni Peters against the Salt Lake & ?'len Railway company for ?20,000 damages, it heing alleged by the plain-to" plain-to" that she was carried nearly two "lies beyond her destination after e had notified the conductor of her ho"ie station. According to word received at wtircli headquarters last week, missionaries mis-sionaries of the Mormon church who "ave been duly ordained and whose """nation is still in force, will be mptei under the selective draft aw if proof is made that they are eglarly engaged in ministerial duties. Attorney General Shields has preyed pre-yed a model prohibition ordinance men he js Sen(ijng t0 t,e mayors of 1 the cities, towns and villages of e state, with the hope of having it si"W'd, in order that the laws of tb "I:,-V 'e made uniform and thf 11 '"hiti-m law enforced, |