OCR Text |
Show WcUI See You At The Junior Baseball Tournamentio At Crimson Field Thursday The Anuriian Legion ha done bK tiling in bringing thi namviit to (int them jour '-- v Oil oim-i- i Brigham t'it mid the afternoon prui;r:i to al p. amt with St. lrow nt George following at o t. in. . tour-Logai- i. &fS Mipporu - four There will mornihK ill the at two in the ! Miduie and ame., two a. in a. m. and at 2:'-;p. m. i "N. Numlit-- r iv. Helpci will play nt Hlou t u Ok den ulmut foiiowiiiK at (V' m. LOGAN. A hnti t O.i EMPLOYES The Roosevelts. Sc!e. He ly Arthur Ihishane Rome Americans ii k politic, tl The udIma of the information. late Theodore Konst; it leeeived Three hundred letters ongt vaunting her on the nunmudjon of her When Kuuevcit was nominated tlmus in. Is ot vot era thought KoaseveH (enernoi wa.s Theodore son or brother. The Lot is that they are distant cuuMri. both dating hack to a tert tin Ko isevelt of m or neven genet. ilmn.s hath OF Aw, Nettr Stops. L;iii!ti:ijr.. ture. K.jperunt, u pulsivc to car linguist, nus not and never will hive, a l.tercture vorlh while. j The universal language will appear when human beings are ready for it, made up of many other languages as existing languages are made up of many. English has the bes- - chun-of survival, in spre of t lie Spaniard's proud sa,nE Italian is theof language of French women, diplomats. Spanish of heroes, and English of horses.1' English is the languuge of Shakespeare, and that counts. MAKE CORRECTION IN Science goes on s eadily. no mat tec what happens to stocks, taxes, elections, etc. Thirty six years his Roetgen discovered and physicians used them 0 look through the flesh into and animal bodies. Sunday rupplh;Vkl?,ts printed interesting hazy pictures 'showing skele.ons of rats inside the rats and skeleton. ladies nud gentlemen inside th. uving bodies. VALUATIONS Cache county automobiles in 1932 numbered 4,269 against 4.590 in 1931, a decrease of 331 cars. Valuations of these 1932 cars aggregated $477,239 against $523, bu in 1931, a decrease in valuation of $16,288 during the year. These figures are shown from compilations of County Assessor H. S. McQuarrig. An erroneous report made public by the state tax commission gave the assessed valuation of Cache automobiles at $1,003,430 for 1931, based on the county auditor's report in which the figures on machinery and those for automobiles must have been transposed, Mr. McQuarrie said. On the auditor's report sheets for 1931 and for 1932, the columns for listing of assessed valuation of machinery and those for automobiles were reversed which may account for the error in listing the machinery valuation as being that on automobiles. Assessor McQuarrie has written a letter to State Tax Commissioner George A. Critchlow calling attention to the error, which, it left to stand, would give automobiles in Cache in 1931 an over-- ixcsxed valuation of more than no, n a dim of a hurequired twenty minin New York's Corcentre snapshot will be taken at the rate of 120 as fast or times 151,200 second, per as the early pictures. inv Credit for this scientific placement is due chiefly to I)r W. D. Collidge. of Schenectady and much credit is due tu the (ieneral Electric company which provides the laboratories in which Dr. Coalidge and hii associates work, and to the other industrial uny organizations, that without on immediate menn emphasis investiscientific profit, encourage gation of every kind. New York City has a big taxation problem. It should coni tort single taxers to know that real estate pays more than 72 per cent of the citys exp. uses, which real e.alate owners consider a fairof the single ly good imitation lax. They demand a reduction of i on three billion in asse ism.-otheir property. personal property which tens of billions of stocks am' bonds and other pi.,se si o s of rc-individuals pays mile 2 p cent of the total cost The explanation is that you call hide conceal or evade taxati m on per sonal property. You can I ( a skyscraper of a tenement house t BY UNITED PRESS t Kept ltt- Mity WK D II. N K S D A A I' V, STUDENT Pull-es- e t i V S T 1 ! OF FI VK OCLOCK KDITION 2. : Close Open High Low 18 r, 03-- 4x3-8.5- 0 51 .5xfi-- 51 .56 M 3 .56 4 .33 2 8 58 l'UlCE FIVE CENTS. PIONEER IN AUNT ELLEN SALARY CUT IN CAR CRASH TAKEN TODAY Employ Dios Crash Lato Tuosilay Early Woman Loader Ten ier Cent Cut In Effect This Month By l. ham, nous vote, Bogan city d '1 uesday night to vinployes ii thij piopjsed additional 10 ,i cent slash in their pay chuck i pii t i be taken niuiilhly until the . oiumission sees fit to restore die old pay schedule. This will oecanie eileclive lor the August payroll, and will mean that checks paid out Bcpleinbor 1 will comprise the new v. age schedule. i he meeting was held at the lire station with President C. VV. Kupp, lire chiel, presiding. Mayor A G. Lundstrom spoke of the city's weakened financial condition as the reason tor tne extra 10 per cult rut. "he city workers voluntarily elected in February to take a lb per cent slash in pay, provided that no further pay cuts were made, and with the unuerstanding that this would Other balance the city budget. Bapn, Citv speakers were Glii-Attorney Leon Fonnesbeck, and I'olice Chief Gilbert Mecham. An additional saving to Logan city of $571 S7 is expected monthly trom the additional 10 per cent wage cut according to City Auditor H. Reuben Pedersen. The July regular payroll of the city was tle-te- i j ar ty Hpi-do- fraternity. RECORD HOIDER PROPERTY DEAL NEARS CLOSING Negotiations for the sale of ths Christian Garff property just below the Hill at First South on Main street by the First National to bank of Logan the Sweet Coal company of Salt Luke were near This completion Tuesday night.information wa.s conveyed to the city commission Tuesday night by Russell S. Hansen, representing the bank. The citv fathers granted the Utah - Idaho Central Railroad company to continue a spur track on the Garff prnpcitv to a point within 30 or 60 feet ot Main street vith the understanding that the trackage in following the of way belonging to the citv $500,000. 'hrough the middle There wan a decrease per car in andtherunning Garff premises will not be assessed valuation from 1931 to of closed as a right of wav. 1932 of $3. Assessor McQuarrie's Tracy, the i ailro id figuies indicate. They are based company,representing asked permission of ihi on an assessed valuation per car citv to dads continue the track .a 133t of $114 against $111 in Mr Hnnsjii requested that the 1132. lreviously it was reported citv fathers table for the t i n that the 1532 individual car values being the bank's sugges ion thal taken about a fifty per cent the city trade right of wav-- , and drop from the previous year's consent to exchange the 37 fo it ha.sed on a figure given of $218.61 per ajt-- i in 1931, and of stria nov owned by the citv fo a shorter strip 20 feet wide for $111.79 ill 1932 The figure $21861 was figured from the erroneous remaining part of the southern valuation of more than one mil- boundary of the Garff property A protest was lodged by the lion dollars placed on all auto- - That-heMilline ctiio- mobiles in the county in 1031 -; Tlin-bv David through taking the figures in ,he;lny- represented is manager, the propi-.-d- j wrong column. n- -j of rii'ht of way grounds that the trade w ,"M II XI) ABUTMENT materially inconvenience th" MIAMI, Aug. 3 d Pi Havden company, and on Lan-isilark and Captain William grounds that the right r t wav in a was urgu--endeeded to the ci'v bitter ergaged bi fore Clark wa.s fatally shot. years ago as a nublie street in whose home rs. City Attorney Leon FonpesS he shooting occurred, testified told the commission that they in the trial of Lancaster on 'onld not legally dispose of this of of first degree murder right i charge os any mem- ";y so long who n Ciaik's death. her of the lies ever public, made ux of it protests. He expressed the opinion, thv the railroad company could b it granted the right to extend tracks along the right of wav so long as there remains suffici- out room for a public highway dong the right of way. It was on his recommendation that Commi sioner N. V. Merklev moved to grant the railroad company per- mission to extend it tracks. Although a lot of earnings reports of big concerns are Engineer Tracv said a crew of1 this ''sour'' year, fairly men would begin work on the are some companies making tra"k extension Wednesday morn- more money than they admit. ing. , ies why: Nearly every concern has cut wages heavily, and after To that, to admit huge profits and pay large dividends would K.A.C. bring out a lot of harsh criticism. Svlvan Erickson, who for the Then, a lot of companies past four years has been accoun- want to take advantage of nt in the secretary's office at the low bond prices to buy in U'nh State Agricultural So the their own bonds. college left Logan today for Cedar citv earnings, statements are kept low and the dividends where he will act as asbistan cut or eliminated, so that bond secretary of the Branrh Agricul- tural college. prices will stay down where Mr. Erickson will take the place the buyers-i- n want them. It's quite probable that, two of Hazea Conley who is on leave of absence. He was accompanied years from now, a lot of hidden assets" will turn up in by his parents, Mr and Mrs AI-- i these concerns and their stockfrt-who will tmr Erickson, holders will profit from a southern Utah before returning to I Logan. t ""11-in- the flock has not been ui by poor care and managemen most of the flock is slid lay the poor producers can b detected during these month t Hens that stop and laving start to molt before this time an usually the poorest producers. Because they molt early is no e.-- i dence that they will molt rapidly and come into production. Bird that molt early are usually on vacation that much longer and seldom start to lay much before the birds tha. molt late, says Mr. Frlschkneeht. keen records Many poultry-mennd as soon as the production per hundred birds falls below 25 eggs per dav for a period of seven days, then they go into the coops and hand-seletheir hens for egg pi oduction. Q I and ' Keith-Mille- to-ii- v r j j Logan Man (Joes At Cedar City j J melon-slicin- life-lon- dctu.ls cf tin- accident were 'I he three others ill the vveic Clyde Jorgensen of fraternity. ptildi--ligh- American journalism than Miss She was the Seripps. nartner and assistant of lur brother. Miss Seripps was born In L don. October 18 1836. She was one of James Mogg of 13 children Seripps. When Miss Seripps was six her mother died. A year later James Mogg Seripps moved to America with his family. It was after the death of her father in 1873 that Miss Seripps to newspaper turned definitely work. She had saved a portion of the money she earned and at 32 went to Detroit, wheie she joined her brother, James K. interested in the then Seripps, He later founded tha Tribune. Detroit News. Miss Seripps wa.s proof reader of both papers and later literary editor of the News. It is tradition that on the News the first desk of Miss Seripps, like those of her brothers, was an empty dry goods 1 $5718.70. fo-'- le. vice. No woman had a more important role In the formative period of Logan, Toil Haglev of Kaysville and Delinar McKinnon of Wyoming. he five wore traveling in i at and were- expc.T.ng to attend the Olympic games in Los Angeles, returning to Utah iate in August. The dead youth was to have been a senior student ut the Utah State Agricultural college this full. He was particularly prominent in athletics, having won two letters each in football and basketball He was a second lieutenant of Battery A in the college RO.TC. nnd u member of the Sigma Chi hay at Y. S. C. who nsas Aw, kid, lets Irnm laainon: ankle down th main stem and blow int.) a fillum' is going ta Irma has get a glassy stare. started a imnvment at th asking girts to refuse dates witn lads win o"ii t use c rrert Knglish. Shcs president of Rhi, Kiiglidi honorary Any . By Carl Frischknechl While every poultryman shouli eliminate the poor producing heir from his flock as they appea throughout the entire year. Augus and September are the best mir ths to make a careful had .vie tion of the flock, says C' irl Fris chknerht, extension poultrynuui of the Utah State Agricultural col I .A JOLLA, Calif, Aug. 3. il'l'l Ellen Browning Scnpps, sister of thj lute Edward W. .Seripps, founder of the Keripps league of newspapers, died at her home here early toduy. Her body was ereniated and with accordance with her own wishes, there was no public ser- - learned i;ik SHOULD BE DONE Coast Rule . FLOCK CULLING Dios On Virgil ('repley was killed ami David V. aldioii seriously injured late TuiM'ay in an automobile ut I iim Rubles, Gahlornia, accorun.g to word which has been received here The tv. o v.ire part of a group of live students iruiu the Utah Rug Annoultural college t d who vtt their way to Los atiomi the Olymnic Angelos i fail ing mx weeks of t;auic aier ca;i:p Kn v oiden. asn- ingten. V. t aptain t K Accurr'in Goodrich, wh arr.xed in Logan Monday from the camp, the boys were icltavoj al 11 a. m. Saturday and le.t imtiv alter tor t'antor-nia- . t Thursday; Grain Range JOURNALISM ' ..m-e.i- Fair tonight Little change in U T A ( If Franklin Delano Roosevelt elected president m November, his will be the third family t i supply two presidents each to tht United States, toe other two were the Harrisons and th" Ada ncs The Roosevelt name of Dub h origin goes back a long way, into the twelfth century It was orig imtliy Rosenveldt. meaning "field of roses The Roosevelt family is not 0 Jewish origin, although many h tve believed that sj h was the case While Governor Roosevelt is a very distune cousin of the lab President Theodore Roosevelt, hi wife was Eleanor Roosevelt daughter of the hit'' Presiden i is Roosevelts brother Kliot, close relation of Theodore Roose velt, being a first cousin of Ahci Roosevelt Longworth and the othr children of Theodore Roosevelt. t TAH Ih e n in MTtioM of the lettuiK USAC KILLED ' au:e frail 31 cou.'ili ie.j ami speak 2J difft rent languages. Uunr.g llu 1 mvciiLun lliey will oo.enk Is, ciaiit ;. May they enjoy it. it is no mure a language turn: is u leal Duby. u rag-dol- l ou c mnot sacce.ssfully create a nc v l.u ;an being o; Immuu langu :gt e :cept by nature', pi , es. In any vaiu-uolcase : foreign l.mg.Lige of its literais hicfly The Weather t isttiiiK kids are K'diiK with a uh rtaimsl r.ije.Hj wat4riiieloii bust, a iiiiiniuK and pictur, show h The kids tin iiiK k CITY ACCEPT Killeen hundred bihrvvs in the l.iadet. order U.'U'.fm! language" ! Lsn o a:.t j. now gathered in Puns) "hus-band.- " s The I . ;i m is a break, t'hejri free t i ; sjNM'ial hlriUherv SinjCe Tax Comfort. l.i.'!2i Low-mo- "V 'yJ v-- v are combiiieii the ('ache Valley Daily lit laid, the Daily Herald and The Journal 182. TODAY (Copyiight, uali. Oil Uw With which 'x. To make man hand utes. Now ned Medical u. tao-biTickrU only double header. Brother, you ean't afford to pav up that much baseball for that priee. - The HeraW Joumal t Volume 23. 1rite l:3o Americanism Wanting to Uan , U.UI :'r.-cwhen your sto.ks go dm-waul lug to elean op i.q W.iti a here's ne Wt&, vittli Give The Boys a Big Hand are With IsOgan Junior mil In the tournament, Hurt- Lift an home team ho eome and jell tor wham Waldron was reported to be in a serious condition with punctured Relatives lungs and pneumonia. of the tw-left immediately from T remontun for Paso Robles falUtah former Koiton, Virgil Aggie athlete ami holder of the lowing word of the accident. recconference Mountain Rocky ord in the two mile run. wilt of the benedicts MINE BESIEGED iom the rank T hursday. according to word received here. Norton, who was prominent in BY UNION MEN school activities ouri"- - his ilium al the college with the class of 1926, will wed Miss Chynis TFitRE HAUTE. Indiana. Aug Merrill of Ogden early Thursday 3 il .9 War with-iiiquarter morning, leaving immediately after wa.s waged today hy mini u'linn for the coast The couple expect Pickets t i the Dm-Bclaying seige to visit the G'.ympicr, during their mine where 75 ti in. workers and guards were emb.d Mr Norton, sim e leaving tlm d college, il ls b.i n situated in OgPickets turned buck on muto-tok- i den ac.d Salt Lake init is omv r, u cjiuner. and o dcpnl . rap. h manager of the American wln-ifom (hey sought t A luted Insurance agency with wounded men in the mine offins in Sait Lake. The sherilf came out of mine condition msiJc declaring "' desperate. He wa i given .1 from the telegram DAIRYMEN SEEK mayor of Ohio, refusing federal in terventioii until such time id the shall hove , MORE MEMBERS toten resources. Intermittent firing was keot no bv both sides. Bullets d A drive for new rrend:-rof the over head. No answer h id to a telegram t the Pint Cache Countv Ilohdein Breeders received marshall at Indianapoli rtsviation wits liunched Tuesday ml SI ales aid. at a ieeting of officers f asking the organization at the county INDIANAPOLIS. Aug 3 mpi President Andrew cmr'.hjuse Nelson of C dlee ward v.ii t in Gnvernor Harry Leylie ordered Indiana na ional guardsmen to the ''hnrr. 0f ti,,. assemble. line trouble zone at tile Divie M( dx r.,nip fees in the a .sori t mine shortly after noon to- tion have been cut from $3 to ST lav annually A letter wall he sent to all Marfhing orders for Hmk ku ird u n from breeders of the a isoeiatiou aKin companies throughout Ii. state were issued this them to cooperate by exhibiting at the governor's dirwtion their cattle thi year at the Ca h Adjutant Governor Toiubau,h Couiitv Kami Bureau fair to he htdd September 13 and U at the h ui made arranyciec for Cache County Ear grounds. departure of th froo-p,- . of infantry and machine gem omjmnies. BWn MEETING All senior members of the Logan KII LE fUC SHEER hi'h school hand are requested to h HKYENNE, Wyo, Autf. 3 meet at Nddey Mali at p. in (ryotes. the wolves of the Thursday m uniform to prepare Eins. killed a total of bs3 sheep for the junior league bu.ebdl in Wyoming during the mon h ot nar.adt c:i .'Eon droet at 1.J.I p m. M iv. figures released by the Bur Thursday Tims request was made a of Biological Survey recently. A. T ruenled. Predatory dog: hilled it Wednesday hy Director Henson cf the hand, sheep. -- c non-unio- U-- I li- i eli-iii:.L- i1.-- rht fter-io'i-- o.i-f.- o wo:ium portrait Hkth of Ellon Browning ScrippK, foremost in the newnpuper world and a nihter of E. W. Seripp, founder of the SerippH newspapers. She i a Rreat aunt of R. W. Krripp d laRiie and Janie U. Neripp, present head off the and friend hhe wait alinmit To her early of NewspaHTH. Aunt Ellen. universally A pio-iii- Korippft-ianfiel- box. Miss Seripps early became noted for her "Miscellany," consisting of feature items. short, interesting As the Seripps League of NewsW. E. papers grew, Seripps was quick to note the value of his From her sister's "Miscellany." idea grew the feature syndicates of modem day journalism. LAKE DUOPS CAMI' CLOSED JOINED SALT LAKE, Aug 3 tC P The level Ctili lake draped an BROTHER 18 years older Miss Scripp-ipioxinmtelv 12 feet during lulv In the renort of H C than her brother, Edward, always 'oningwaiter was close to him. In 1881 when commissioner. Icnseti. he founded the Cleveland Bress she became his partner. Later stis NEAP OPENING - The invested in the Cincinnati Post PPOVO, Aug. 3 0 ID of the zoning of the Karmers and Mer and other newspupers hanta hank of Provo, closed since Seripps league. When a brother, George H. Mrh in the war, is expected to Seripps, died in 1900, a large part ithin u few duvs according Miss to uf his fortune went amiiier J A. Malia. Scrinps. It was nt this time, acMiss ids to fru h her that v'ti a;ulal aMMi.E-T.t'TUlS OUN TOMBSTONE cording seemed to r.alize that ;idtd n tin (hath cf tw t.f th ntON MOUNTAIN. Mich. Aug. 3 Seripps :: .soldiers (arlo Formenti. 74 years she was wealthy ur.il that she in H has completed his own tomb evitably would become richer it S!.)OT VOl Tl! tinp. He is charging curious she lived. s- ectators fi cents Shortly after sne retired to each for a KtltlKA. Auq 3 E'u ' glimpse at his handiwork. Calif., Miss Seripps came to Hcckiipf to h dt octty theft c regard her estate as a trust to be fruit from their eyDurs shot distributed while she was aiive. .urmuslv wtiunded Harold Hussdl NEW TRAIL II. of H dt Lake Tuesday ruht - A FISH LAKE. Aug. 3 ' "ov scenic short cut, the Lions MXHKINC TIME STATE CAMPS OF efnil completed through 'h 3 M.T Ll'K Au forts cf the Urns club of Saline other agencies was opened up With milk .c!l n r at r'cvn VETS ARE SEEN i 'mart opprMiu; factions in the this week aftr being constructed rnark-ioijD it an approximate cost of $2H,(X0 or here were iujff. to a Wednesday, each waitti'e EADS PROJEET fur the other to nmiie the next WASHINGTON, Aug. Waters promised today to LAKE Aug 3 "dh the nlrntinr establish his RE F. in a string of bcuififu'0 I ii:i;mk CONVENTION ,;'n cf a nst s'iill plat f gr,"nd camps in every one of the 48 Puedav Serret irv cf P'atrt Mjh-- states. ('TTY An? 3 il l it Weliig c"ipletd n banti-fi.atirForced by Governor Ritchie to ve 'cut-- ar'1 neann? corn. protect he started at the abandon his dream of building a tiiD h!, f.the annual (Tth Kjr,. Mon's Hssoijn to he 'initol budding over three years permanent national bonus colony in a wooded Maryland gully, Wittgo. .Id A, -- pist 11. 12 and 13 ters directed his force now wailing ItOAD COST 9 MILLIONS ut Johnston, Pa to disperse to EMIMII I) IN 33 SK(U) fTOTHrBlRO Swe Aug 3 their homes, ' Me An" 3 Th ' This seems to mean the end of J en.st Sweden la ir00,OiM) h (lr eiiniHf School uitli PM the bonus army us a concentrated c m i maintain its highways '.v.ci ii 3f ecmd' But new fire p). national army. r 'ul 'i IM31 This was brought a Kai-nfire drill. showed today in Waters eyes. He lit by Ola .T, prison S ' edish Min-ti.f r,anuounif,tions. at a sees now not one bonus army hilt MEET IN OGDEN 48 militant state organizations of llu Swedi h Hoad As r. q An" r :d':n a latmn directly into the political 'io,i sw taris of th Kifth campaign to carry on the fight t in f?otMf,v nven for LVNX HMD payment of the veterans bonus. odion t tip n t Tl.ursdi'v right. JOHNSTON. Pa, Aug. 3 dpi -Mayor Eudie McCluskey announced TKIEtouay that the bonus army would KSIAIV disband and leave Johnston to-- j I rhino oKDIA A'te 3 morrow mornin-;two Tlic infant weighing ah nit K.b'i ti. 21. " ha is being hU announcement came after he fb-flailing ft tin th 1tuli- ounil will Ih raised on the bottle hadHis conferred with B E.F. coin riMn. was fnstalvd in manders here. SLR KM S PROBLEM in 'iiii'l t) s ar frm th ritv The officers of the B E.F. went v.hi-SLT LAKE. Au,f 3. dD t'lrmla fount him in! Smaller revenues and unavoidably into conference to talk the be-- I n't r hv hat fuddled blamwere increased situation over. McOoskev expenditure'' of his eel! v.ith a ed for the serious financial situ- said Governor Pinchot would send ation in Salt Lak. county bv trucks here tomorrow and Tamp ' missjon chairman in a speech would be abandoned. TO HEAR REPORT Tuesday. -SALT LAKE Aug 3 in Th report of t!v cnmnnCo on th" NF.H M VltKEKS ikin'! ever of Paw academy as SALT LAKE PITY. Aug. 3 d l9 i '.Lite b will junior college New traffic regulations will go n up bv the s ate beard of edu-- . into effect in Salt Lake Citv cation Thursday (BY UNITED PRESS) shortly with the erection of 250 The bears were NEW YORK new traffic signs which have been I EAST IN DEMAND routed on the New Y'ork Stock received. OKLAHOMA CITY Aug. 3 "19 exchange today. Their scramble ta Nurses are least in demand in cover sent stocks Up one to seven PLANS INSPECTION scrof seven household Oklahoma SALT LAKE CITY. Aug. 3. dPi points. was gradual ice tvnes of worker, report of The buying Utah will be visited by Brieadvr st ite Labor ('ommissio"er Fit General Frank T. Hines, adminis end came after an early setback Murphy revealed L)a- icsti i fared trator of the United States veter- - but it gathered momentum and best, with hmiichold laundresses ans bureau, late this month or at the close, activity was so he said. frenzied the tickers fell behind. early next. United Press Flashes I a, ps ''d if, Mpp-UA- -- a r . , , "h ' psi -- : i !.i-- . Report Made On City Road Oiling Finances Logan citys projected oiling program to date has entailed nn exiwnditurp outlay $10,000, City Auditor H. LeuLvii IViierseri reported O uommis-iothe city Tuesday night About two more months will be before the proj t is required completed. Spevial payrolls aggr;;nt ing $119 30 in the dec trie hfcht plant S4 and in the $2444. fund, general fund were approved and ordered paid by the city dads. The $2,144 M is nearly all for labor on the street oiling project during July, except for a few puy- - sired n nients ind on bills against cemetery water funda. The $10,000 paid out is since May 1. During May. 3ir men received employment with disbursements of llooo in wages: in June mi rren were given work to earn re- $r.x; ceived during July, ISO men and reived in cash $13 o. Besides the cash paid out. about an equal amount has been held in the citv treasurer to apply against outstanding light hills of those employed, or eh ; credited to them for future electrical service from the muntcipu! pemer plant. ru part time employment ' Sui 11I LH- n- - tk - . |