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Show .-.----MBHtMMMNMMaH utau statITneys The Utnh HnpllBtB, In convention nt Bait I-iiiku City, declared for local option. op-tion. Tho Utnh nnptlHtH hold their twenty-fifth annual convention lu Salt Ltilto City litHt week. CooUIiik will bo taught to High school pulls of Suit ltlto City during the comliiK Bchool ycttr. Tiro Ytiiorcnn party will hold Its state convention In Salt lal(i City on Septcmbur 28, when a Btato tlol'ot will bo placed In the field. A contract hits been lot by tho Com-uiorclnl Com-uiorclnl club of Salt l.alio for tho con-Hlructloii con-Hlructloii of a iniigulllt'ent now homo lor tho club, to cont S200.000, , Announcement was made hmt week that tin' Ogden factory of tho Amalgamated Amal-gamated Sugar company would begin cpcnitlon this year on Sept. 10. Frank IUlrman, n 10-year-old Salt Lake boy, was arretited lu Ugden last week, charged with Htealltig it horse mid buggy from a Salt Lake liveryman. livery-man. Milton Thatcher, hoif of John I). Thatcher of Logan, tiled of dropsy, Biiperlnilticod by leakage of tho heart, nt Dempaey hot Hprlngu, In Idaho, lat week. Iu tho explosion of a locomotive on tliti Denver & Itlo Crniido near Thompson')!, Knglneer Lund and Klre-man Klre-man ltedell, of (Jrand .Junction, were Injured. An attendance far In excess of any provloiiB year Is expected at each ol tho educational Institutions In Ogden, and the city schools for tho approaching approach-ing session. Two cases of typhoid fever havo broken out among tho Inmates of the Industrial school. This, coupled with tho epidemic of scarlet fever, Is giving tho olllceru of tho school sotuo concern. Thero has been such u demand for EMail homes in Salt Lako thnt many Investors who havo commenced tc build such structures have sold them before tlto work of construction was completed. James W. Walsh, formerly a resident resi-dent of Salt Lako City, being especially espec-ially well known lu nthlctio circles, wttB killed as tho rcmilt of tho prema-turo prema-turo explosion of a blast In u mlno near I'locho, Nevada. The three-year-old dnughtcr of M. J. Crowley fell from a second-story window lu Salt Lako, n dlstanco of flli feet, iind eseaiied with a fow ollglr' ImilHOH. Sho had dropped hor doll and fell out of tho window after It. Ctd. H. A. AVall of Snlt Lnko City lms rewarded with a check for ? 1,000, tiro hotel clerk nt I-ong lionch, Cnl., for rescuing his daughter Mary, 18 years old, Mrs. Lindsay Hogors and l'cr daughter Helen, of Fresno, from drowning. A runaway team rnn over tho three-year-old son of J. T. Lynch of Ogden, vJille tho llttlo follow was playing on the nldownlk. Tho child narrowly escnped death, having an arm broken In two places and bolng othorwlso painfully Injured. Tho first carload of Alberta peaches shipped from Surlngvillo this season wnB sent out on September 2, by tho local branch of tho Utalr County Fruit association. It Is estimated that Sprlngvllle will ship over twenty-llvo cars of Alberta penches this season. Ilyrum V. Smith, n carpenter whoso homo was In I'ayson, whllo visiting Silver City, fell liito nn abandoned shaft, a dlstanco of 2G0 foot, his body being horribly mangled. Tho mint) had been boarded ovor, but hnd caved near tho mouth, leaving n thin crust of earth. David II. Jones, Jr., of Provo, met v. 1th n serious accident wli-llo on n trip to tho reservation. Ho shot n chicken from his wagon, and on got-ling got-ling off to securo It tho gun fell to tho ground and exploded, tho charge entering IiIb right leg between tho ankle and knee. Tho health bonrd of Provo, with tho help of two velorlnnry surgeons, has located four cases of glnndors, and from t!ii circumstances surrounding the eases, lt Is evident thnt more thnn 100 hordes havo been exposed to tho disease Four of tho horses wero vltliln the city limits. Although thorn woro plenty of hot days In tho Salt Lnko vnlloy during 'August, the report of tho weather bureau bu-reau for tho montlr shows that tho average temperature was lowor than It has been for thirty-live yenrs, with tho exception of 1907, when tho nvor-ago nvor-ago tomporaturo was 71. Whllo Intoxicated. H. C. Foster, n Wyoming cattleman, was arrested mil placed In the Ogden Jail, whero lio attempted sulcldo by Jabbing him-Bolf him-Bolf In tho neck with a pleco of rusty balling wire. Ho (ought so hard to prevent physicians from aiding him that he was placed In Irons. Tho right of way asked for by tho Southern Utnh rnllroad has been approved. ap-proved. Tho now road will bo elgh-teen elgh-teen miles In length, running In n f.outlreasterly direction from Prlco along Miller Creel; to tho now coal fields which are now bolng dovoloped. Work will begin In tho near future. ny a majority of 351 tho CO.OOO waterworks bond issuo wns carried nt a special bond election hold In Ogden. Tho total vote cast was 9119, and each ward In tho city gavo a substantial majority In favor of tho Issue. Tho lesult of tho election means municipal muni-cipal ownership of tho wntorworks. Securing a bottlo of carbolic acid from tho sick room of her grandfather, grand-father, llve-yeni-oltl Vora Foster, daughter of Mrs. Dehlla FoBtor. of Plain City, swallowed a mouthful of the burning chemical, and for a time her life was despaired of. Tho child's mouth and Hps are fearfully burned |