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Show THEJORDANJOURNAL, MIDVALE,UTAH .. •............... .......... , Chicago Boy Scouts Pay Tribute to Lincoln Morbid Crowd at Barbara La Marr's Funeral News Notes i (. ·' Chicago boy scouts paying t heir annua l forma l visit to the statue' otl Lincoln In IJncoln park. W ith t hem a re Ba rtow Ulri<'h, who k new t he Great Ero\inc,lpator, and La urence Kaufman, an actor wh o Imper sonat es Lincoln on the st age. I. It'• aPVt;bLioe in ~! it !•••·...~···· ..••••••••••.. I Washington.-A veterans' hospital will not he established at Salt Lake I f:ity, for the present, at least. This was the belated of the hos· pltalization b.o ard of the veterans' bu· I reau which was reached recently. Th<.> adopted hy th!s board, o[ I resolution which GenNa! deci~ion Frank T. IIine3 direc· tor is the bureau is chairman. Salt Lake City. -With thP. ~rospect of a week's time before thrm1 ~uppoR· eu to be devoted entlrelv tn study 1 and contemplation the baseballers 1 connected with the promotion of the new Utah-Idaho league showed a few signs of real activity, hut the gurgling Rotmd of the ~irnnering pot was none the less distl ct on that a,:count. I I I I inches of InewSaltsnowLakefell City.-Seven at Brig!J ton. according to report madu to the st porint er.dent of waterworks. This makt>s a total of ~4 inches of Rnow in the past tow days and brings the total depth on the Big Cottonwootl watershed at this l1me to GO inches. . ------,-----'---~-- ~tit Lak~ Cit_y.-Salt Lake City is , I View of the Immense crowd at the funeral of Barbara La Marr, screen actress, in Los Angeles. The m. -~~ger 0 losm.g _the nnit of th•l.alr efforts of the morbid to get near the caflket caused a riot In the course of which a number of women were Injured, se1 \ 1ce reserve "h1ch now has lt1 ad· as was also Bert Lytell, one of the pallbearers. quarters and planes at Woodward field, if greater interest is not man~ ( ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-~~~~--~~~~~~-·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ --- Steaming the Snow Off a Building in Boston rested by a larger number of air ser- , \ice reserve officer~. said Lleutrnant Colonel H. Eumunu Bullis of the ~;E-n era! staff of the United States army, who is in Salt Lake to confer with the officers in charge of the reserve units ( Salt Lake City.-Following a prac- I tice being followed generally through· out the country, the Salt Lake Cham· J her of Commerce agricultural committee is putting the radio to work to 1 scatter high points about agriculture m B'tah. Each Thursday the agrlcul· tural committee gives timely infor· mation to farmers over station KSL after the quotations on farm products 1 and other releases from the departmet 1 of agriculture are given. I I l Antmoe . s·Ink.mg After Ga 11ant Rescue 0 f Her crew ,. !~. , .. ·.·"' ~ _.. .;· ··. /. ,_, \Vashington.-Echoes of an unusual growing season in Utah in 1925 are heard in a report to the commissioner ...:·· ..···=:--:-· .·.. '.··. .;:;:::·· •• ~-~ :S:=::: ._., of reclamation on the Strawberry pro· 1 • » .-:· ject, which showed a big increase in 1 . :-:· :-: the best yield per acre over the year ... ~-~ ». before. Notwithstanding the de· 1 ..· ·.;:: . ··, creaser! acreage, the beet crop in· creased from $53,560 tons in 1924 to 61,208 tons In 1925. or an average in· crease per acre of from s~ven tons to This picture of the sinking of the British Uner Antlnoe, &fter the gallant rescue of her crew by the men thirteen tons. of the American liner President Roosevelt, was cabled from London and transmitted !rom New York to Chicago Salt Lake City.-The January pro· over the wires o:t: the American Telephone and Telegraph company. duction in the Second Utah Inter· mountain Eg-g Laying contest contin· SOLD TO GYPSY ned to be good but doe~ not equal the j January production of last year. The I average production of each of the pul· I 'ts in th" contest for January was 1[).2 eggs and an average for the fir :J t three months 'Of 41.4 eggs, which is an average of only one-half egg for C'ach pullet mor!' than the fir~t :). months' production of last year. There arc still sL"I. pullets in tl1e contest that do not have a single egg to their credit. two others with a record of only one egg each, and six other pul· 1 lets with records of two to five eggs each for the first three months of the 1 contest. 1 Salt Lake City.-At a conference in I the offices of the state road commis· sion, Salt Lake County offered to fur· I nish from its state road tax $40,000 for construction of about 1.9 miles of 1 pavement on the east side of State I street, and running north from the south city limits of l\Iurray at Loven· ; \· '· dahl's corner. Murray city commis-~ ' ' sioncrs said that $5000 was as much \ they felt, as the city would afford. • j Salt Lake Cit!.-Livestoc~ _throu~h·; ., , < out the state is m good cond1tlon, vnth ample moisture to supply its needs, according to the weekly survey of the 1 United States weather bureau. 'Vin· I grain is reported good at Garland, 1lcSold for $2,000 to the k,ng of a / Cornick and Ogden. Recent storms hand of gypsies seven months ago, have improved the range at Holden, 1 ltose Dalena, sixteen, a Spanish gil·!, \ and the s<lme is true of the Ceda1 was found roaming aimlessly about City vicinity, where new snow has Newark, N. J., at the height of a re) fallen. There is also new snow at cent snowstorm. She was taken to a Monticello, while Blanding ranges l charitable lnstftutlon for protection Miss Maud Slye, associate professor nt the University of Chicago, who have been improved by showers. I while her case Is being studied. asserts that cancer Is not a germ disease lmt Is hereditary, Is here seen Southeastern Idaho o.tas ample snow among the cages containing the mice with which she has conducted her to supply water for •·.ock. experiments for sixteen years. MARTIN SCHUMPERT Salt Lake City.-Su.>port In secur· ing legislation for the vrotection ot Utah school land was promised by tJ:le Utah State Farm bureau, in a letter sent to D. W. Pan·att, secretary of the Utah Educational association by M. s. Winder, executive secretary of the bureau. Price.-At a meeting of thlr~y-four Price anrl "'ellington farmer~ .:ailed ( t>y Or~:~on P. Ma<1s<>n, county agent, fl. was decided that the eradication 1 of l.hree principal weeds that are ( ~;alning a fofJtl.J.'lld in the county f would be one of the chief projects to 1>11 undertaken in 1926 hy the farmf•rs pf tais sectio·1. )': ~. Looks like a tire, but it's only steam nsed to melt the snow on the Carter Rice building on Devonshire street, Boston, and thus avoid danger to pedestrians from falllng blocks of snow and lee. JAPANESE BEAUTY Liner Now Has Sailing Lifeboats \ ~-· I Woman Finds Facts About Cancer I I Miss Setsu Matsudaira, tht eldest 1 daughter of the Japanese ambassador to the United Stat es, posed for this exclusive portr ait. Born in Japan, she has rapidly become accustomed t o American ways, and Is a favorite with Deck Yiew on t he P acifi c liner Ilarvuru, In drydock at Los Angeles, where she was eq uipped wit h salliog lifeboats. The boat deck of the big the younger diplomatic set. liner lt:',s :m odd appea ra nce wi th the lifeboat sails hoisted. ONLY BARD IN HOUSE Washington Huntress in Africa Allies Take Their Boats From Rhine I Representative Charles E. Winter or \Vyomlng holds the di:;tinctlon of be· ing the only "bard" In congress. He Is ' author of. the Wyoming state :song and ulso a chronicler of the West In his .\l r;;. I ,allt•lt II. Wilson of Washingt on has just re turned, from a big game historic novels. He Is shown singing hun tl n;; el'peuition In Africa. This picture shows her (right) in t he j ungle the state song, "Wyoming State with a group of natives and an animal she killed. Ma r ch." l l Salt Lal<e City.-A. W. Anderson of Price, secretary manager of the t:tab Honey Producers' association, rep(II·ta j l'1at J. S. Paton of the John G. Paton company of New York recEntly met with the Utah assoctation and renew ott contracts f0r th:.> presrnt sc::,.son j Tt.e company purchase({ the Utah s· tr· 1 p!tw honey hanrlle!l by this associ'\ j tion for the pagt two years, and tho 1 lllartin Schlimpert, who has just British wurcruft belonging to the allied Rhine flotilla nrc shown making fact that it has purchnsed the thlr•.l arrived In \Vashlngton to tnke up his their difilcu\t journey home, through the various canals, following the orde.cr0D tells of the high regard wlt! duties as the new secretary of the to evacuate Cologne. which it views t h o Utah product. German embassy In the capital. |