OCR Text |
Show THE JORDAN JOURNAL, 1\IIDVALE, UTAH • PURSUES ENEMY 2,000 MILES TO TAKE HIS LIFE IS rN;;~·N;t~;·l It'• a Privilege to LiV2 m Utah I Accountant Trails Soldier of Fortune Who Defrauded Him Three Ye::zr.s. Portland, Malne.-A 3,000-mile jour· ney -to slay . the man who abandoned 'him in a Mexican jail ended success· fully for Benjamin H. Turner, mild· mannerf'd little American accountant from ~1exlco City, Tried in Mexico for murder, Turner said he was rp!pased three years ago and since had tra!led James D. Hallen, soldier of fortune with International record for larcency, forgery and . swindling eperat!ons: to "settle with him" fo.t· taking his life savings and then fuillng to defend him at his trial. Wants to Be Arrested. Turner accomplished his purpose at Hallen's home . In Falmouth Foreside. Calling Hallen from tiul house, 'l'urner pumped five bullets lnt{) his body, then told two terrified witnesses to ''get the police, I won't run."· 'l'urner's story and newspaper cUppings :found In his trunk at a hotel disclosed that In 1921 he shot and killed Ramon .'Argielles, .J\:Iexlco City broker, for swindling him. Letters to detective agetW'ies indicated that he turned over all his monPy, $1,200, to Hallen as -attorney's fees und that Hallen left for the United States soon afterward. Turner was acquitted In Ma'J·ch, 1923, after members of tile American colony had hired counsel fot• him. Lawyer and Art Authority. 'rhe police were Informed that IIallen had been an authority on Italian ..................... Siillts Fine fOr Aching Kidneys When ~~··· Back Hurts Flush Your Kldneya aa You Clean Your Bowola . Gunnison-With organization of a local poultry association at Gunnison the poultry Industry in the Gunnison ~lost ~olks forget that the kidneys, valley holds promise of rapid expan· like the bowels, sometimes get slugsion. The organization has started on gl:>b and clogged and need a flushing a campaign to secure a large sign-up occasionally, else we have backache or members. Plans already have bee~ and dull misery In the kidney rpgion, made to ship several thousand· baby severe headaches, rheumatic twing~. chicks into the valley next spring to torpid llvPr, acid stotnach, sleeplessenlarge existing flocks and starCnew ness and all sort13 of bladder disorders. ones on farms whoso operations are You simply must keep your kidnevs interested in entering the new activity. active and clean and, the h:toruent y~u · feel an ache or pain in the kidney .Ephraim-A number of city of<~· region begin drinking. lots of water. cials, the city electrician and some Also get about four ounces of Jad business men of Ephraim met wi1h l:>alts from any good dt·ug store here, L-foward C, Means of. the Telluride take a tablespoouful in a glass f wa?'ower -company Saturday to discuss ter before breakfast' for a few days the power from the · Telluride .eoin- and yonr kidneys will then act fine. pany. If was agreed by· all that some- This famous salts is made from the tl:'l!ng . must be done to insure light acid ·of · grapes and INuon "ju!te, comand power for Ephraim durtng the blned with lithia, and' is inlended to coming winter, and the proposition ot flush clogg-ed kidneys antl help stimu: the Telluride compa·ny· seems ':ery I late th~m t? activity. It ·also~ helps good ti:' 'lome of those present. neutraltze the acids In the· urine so the.)! no · longer irritate, thus helping Ephraim--considerable interest is to relieve bladder disorders. · being aroused wcally· by a.n experi.Tad Suits is Inexpensive·: makes a ment by Ross Jensen of ·Ephratm. ·in delightfu[ effervescent lithia watet· trapping the alfalfa weeviL T.he- main drink which everybody should take weapon used by Mr . .Jensen is molas.- now and then to help keev their liidses, from -a- sugar mill. To this ·he ileys clean. • ... adds a bait, the nature of which he i3 A well-known local druggist says he· willing to explain to any farmer. The sells lots·- of Jad Salts to folks who pan or other container with the mix- believe in. trying to CO'rrect 'kidney ture in is placed at a convenient place trouble \\'hile·it is only trouble. in the alfalfa field. If it is a calm, " . warm day; such as those: of late, ·it Fish Travel Far tu takes only a few hours to ·get the Escape From Storms container filled with a seethi1lg· mixThat fish are <·ap"b.le of. swimnljng ture of weevil and molosses. llundred~ of milPs . ''eeking refuge. Provo- .. ork on the new plant of from storms has been pron'll in the the Pacific Statas Cast Iron Pipe watet·s of St. Andrew's bay, at l'ana~ company, now in- course of construe- n.a City, ~Fla.1 according to "!! ~is tion at Ironton, is prOgressing rapidly, patch from that pla(·e. :'ome of the according to George l!l. Sibbett, gen- l0(1lf fi~hermen retnmcd wHh an eral manager of the plant. The plant enormous catdt of n ldnd of mnllPI Is now under roof· and. mach-inery ls that iS ne>er f'<'en ilr the!':e wate~. being'l'il]:iidly installed, and prospects Its habitat 'is 'thP Oulf of :1-Iexil·o· off' an3' favorable that operations -will be· the soutlrernmn~t !-lhores 'of the we>!t gin-some time in November.. ' coa><t, a distance err l!<lO or 400 nlil.s. Larg-e· Kchools of ¥Hrloti» kinds 6f fi"'rt Salt Lake-The c:;ol)tinuerl niai·~.e.t}~_!!;. f6reign fo this ·<li:<tt•ict l•m·e hN·n· of bi·.eeding stock throu~Jwut th.e. conn: s-een: in tile j:!:nlf-- ont>li<k 'I· he rity in try bears a semblance to burnmg ._the the last few days l'wimt!liJJg iu~1Ms candle at both ends, al'.d .the cowman <lirPrtion. in' an apparently exhau>;te<l should consrider. well .b.efore_.he lets. go conrlilinn. Another int<'rP~tin" oc-?f .his ·breeding stock, particulat~y, if cu}:i!.m5'e, tint on\" w!tkll precP<l~d the tt 1s of proper type and. quallty, Is the storm. in this S<'Cti<>n, "was the fact id\'ice .of J. A. McNaughton. general ti1af ]llliHlrl'<ls ·of tltnu ·an<ls of ·~ulr~ manager of the. Los ·An;;eles Union fie,~ into tltP harbor nwl Its·i·,mnec-liu):t stockyards. Figures cited by,.the Lq~ bayolf~ fflt' seYcral d1i~'s ri'l'ior to- tllat Angelean show that fOl' -the Orst SQVen eYCiit' ' months of ·tllis year appr:oximat~ly.8o. . · . • per cent of the cattle' tllaughtered 1n DE.M AND ·" BAYER'' ASP ·· 1 the United States was -classified: . .4!} · · :... • per cent steers, 48 per cent cows and T~ke •. Tablets Without Fear If '(pu tieifers, and 3 per cent bulls and stags. ' - See the Safety "Bayel' Cros " I • I I iU~~ the European war blew up on Monday moming, No' ember 11 H\18 the detonation jaHed Amtl'ica'~ war~ weary people Into the most wholehearted, spontaneous, unrestrained and reckless celebration ever recorded. And what a celebration it was 1 Cit12s went wild and villages r&jolced. Everyone rushed to the streets to join with the mad throng In Its unorganized parades and ' revelries. Doctors, lawyers and bankers deserted their offices and forgot their dignity to add their voices and cheers to the general pandemonium. In the cities throughout the country, particularly the larger ones, the phenomena of that first .1\rmifit!ce day were strikingly of one order. What was hOflJlenlng In New York was happening In Chicago. And In Philadelphia, Milwaukee, San Francisco, Detroit. St. Louis, At!anta, Cleveland and Boston it was the same. America really had two Anui~tice celebrations, the one of 'rhursdny, Non:mber 7, four days earlier, precip!ta ~ed by a cabled rumor, se1·v!ng liS a rehean-;al for the great exhibition of the following Monday. From newspaper accounts of the following day we rPad that in ihf: cities, particularly New York and Chicago, "delirium and license disputed the rule of t1te streE>ts. The mad revel of the day 8(Jproached an orgy by night." The wlld celPbratlon begun In the darkness or the early morning hours of l\Ionday, ragE>d during the day, gathering speed and recklessness the white, and ended in hysteria In the early morning l!Ours of Tuesday. Before midnight the good natured rowdyism had become general. Thou· tiands of men and women had their hats knocked from their heads and trampled underneath the feet of the hilarious multitude. Those who had lost their hats seized those of others and wore them away. Disheveled girls snatched caps f1·om ~ll{)rs and !tats from men anrl were opf'n!y kissed and hugged In joyous revenge. The girls were no more backward or dlffidE>nt than the men. Who cared? The kaiser had beE>n whipped aud thE- vmr was over. Starting in the darkness of early Monday morning, when men answered the shriek of whistles hy leaping from bed to seize revolvers 8nd shotguns and rend the as yet unbroken ~lence of the neighborhood with the bark of firearms, the thing grew In proportion as the minutes unrl hours passed on. Women, young and old, walt-=d only long enough lo throw overcoats over their night dresses before they rushed to the streets beating on kettles, tooting horns, and crylng to neighbors that peace had comf:. From opE>n windows came the strains <Jf "'l'he Star Spangled Banner," "Am~·rlca," "Over There," and any other airs the sleepy-eyed revelers could think of. ThE>n here and thE:re a!on~ residential streets the flames of quickly kindled bonfi!'es appeared, 8nd In the dim light of the dawning half-clothed nwn r.nd women pe1•formed weird dances In honor of th<' ka lscr's down fall. Tntlns leaving the awakeni11g cities roared through the countryside with whistles shrlekin~ the news to suburban towns and outlying villages whleli soon hlnzed with light as the vll!agers erose to celebratE-. Farmers, miles from the railroads, heard the screaming wtt!stles and rose to teleplwne their neighbors or to apprise them of the s1e'' ~ by tiring shotgun~. . ·Shot' to With the coming of the light, tht exndt1s from the residential districts into the business sections downtown began. Hurriedly throwing on their clothes, men ancJ women ri1shed In !iearch of any means of tram;portntlon which would take tlwm to th& scene where as actors they were to stage · the most spectacular performance of its kind In history. TwUey cars, elevated trains and subm'ban lines dumped their shouting freight anc..l went back empty :!'or more. Motor cars, trucks and busses <'lll'l'ied twice- as many passpngers as there was r•Jom for as they picked their way through the Crowding streets with O.'!:haust wide · open and sirens and horns lllowlug. Eleven o'dock In the morning found downtown strtets jammed as on a pre-Volstead New Ye~r's eve. llfulling around and weaving in ond out was a cheering, shouting, laughing crowd, which hnd brought with it and was continuing to procure every Imaginable accessory which would add to the superr:arnlval spirit. A!l the noisemaking devices kno~n In the history of man were impressed Into service. Horus sounded everywhe:·e. :\!en onll boys appeared rolling huge! garbnge cans, beating them with clubs. Cowbelfs, cymbals, dishvans added to the uproar. ' Crowds thronged the five-and:tf"n-cent stores, depleting the stock of horns, clackers, drums, confetti, dl~>hpans, skillets nn<l rolls of paper. Youths emerged with arms full of . huge boxes of cheap 1 talcum powdet· which soon began to dust the fa('es and clothing of the mob. T'h rown aloft, It descen<1ed tn gr·eat clouds, whitening everything It touched. Old m<'n marched dow11 the streets beating children's drums. Gray-haired women hammered on shiny dishpans which were destined ·never to float a dish. All the while the noise was growIng In voJ.ume, but the crowd appeared to be hearIng 1t the less. The cnnyons of the business district re-echoed the senseless din, whil~ the skyscrapPrs belched tons and tons of paper from their countless windows. F!ylng hits of papet· filled the air (>VHY· where, until It looked as though a mighty snowstorm were RWf'eplng the city. The streets became (·arpeted with lt. Long streamers of ticker tape and adtllng machine rolls hung from troll~>y poles and wires and from windows lind fire escapes. Confetti flllecl thE: air. From offic·es high In the ulr came hundred:; of pages of torn telephone directories, fluttering tr. the .;treet. They littered the pavement. :\ew stationery, file rards, records, IPtters, wall paper~· enr)·thlug was hurletl l!. that mad scramhle of re·leased emotion. Office girls hurled the contents of wastebaRket>~ on the- heads of the 11otrrs below aucl then ru~herl to join In the merrymaking on the street~. Pandemonium wns a churrhyard comparf!<l to thifl, It was All l!'ools' day, Fourth of Jul:y, Hnllow~'en Death~ · ' ' J\.fyton-Starting Monday a · series of community fa.rm and home l!leeti!)gS •.will b.e held .tnroughout' the Wntah basin. It js announc{id by tlie Uintah f;rm bureau. These nieetlirgs · .b y • o ff'' · 1s .o f.. th e· will 'be attended 1_ma Utah stat~ farm b~reau .and .the· Utah Agricu~tural extenswn di\·i,sion. ~[. P. Brown, presid~nt, an_'d M. ·s . ·w·JU d. e,r,· secretary, .will . tepr!)se.n.t .the s'tate bureau,. while Hena. B. Maycock will attend a·s r-epresentative of the col· · • le"'.e. E. E. Smith, :who ,is 1!-W.le_c.ting "' seed f<>l'- the Utah e~b.'ibit to tl~e. i~· te'i'national hay and ·grai~- shO\V, ~111 make the trip at the saroe ti.m~ W meet witn basin seedsmen, •. -: ·-< ·'Warrilng! ·Unl~H j'{)U !'ee the name "P,aye-r" on pad>age or· -en tab leN ~·ou nre- . not -getUJTg· the geuuine D:t)'J..'l' Aspirin provPd safe . by ntillions :m'd prescribed hy pln.·;;id:ms for :?G .•·ear;;. • -Say "Bayer" .when you buy AsvLrin. Imitations lll:J-Y·Pr<>U~ cl:utgerc.m,;.-A!,lv. ~ , •art and lierntm·e, a:•locturer on dtauna, n ·keen lawyer, a. pwmoter of ~toctr. Tree Both Good and Evil schemN;, a 'tlteatet• owrrer ·and h!td · · . · The·• niP,tt. pal:,-,, whkh Co\. <.Sh·,ui d 1pped • into j:l:).urualism . In , tlte Ha.-, • Thom[)Ron, t•rPRidPnt Conlftke';; i'\iswalla.n lst<~.nds and Han Francisco. - m-sar.Y in the l'hilipr•ine bimHlR, rec< nt 1s wlfe. \\'itn~sgea-tlle shoottn;r und and caTnivi'l.l rolled into one p.tighty ·_billow of fainted"'l\·hen one of the· tit!llets· ripped ly ·lenrrw•l ma,,· l+ec·qrne an imppr}ant source of >:ug-ru·, haR Ion~ hcen an im· mc>rrlment. 'info t,'" rt.om ln · which she was sit-whenever a mnn appearell with a larg~: flag ting. portanl ftv·ror il'l the Pcono:ulr; life nf he inimediately lwcame the leader of an im.. · the peopiP of the lslnnd~. ~a~-s the proruptu, unorganized parade, soon sweli"ing ' Into Cl 'k R t B d. l\IintlPapolis . .Journal. It .sup]lliPs .~J:eler ou S an tts. · ·' E".hl·aJ·m-Se.ve"al " ·b u t 't ·· 1lf'f< · .t 1~(· •w • ca"s • of -sheep and t er an c..1 f o~'''" • -a 1so. f urm~< thousontls, where staid matrons murchE:d \\'ith chorus"· girls, whN·e bartenders, still wearing With Loaf ol Bread lamb& a.re. being shillPed. fr'om Eph· basiwof "vino," tlte nws' ht';linthelr -ivhlte aprons, linked arm and arm with! l'lrfludelphla.~:Arme'd witlr' a Jong raim. P. c: Peters6n shtthied' a' car COJ1rodlng liquirlH Pl'('lltH·ed hy tile tal .men clad in minlstprial garb, where white mingled loaf of breall;'' all elghtern,yeur-old out Tuesday and Seymour E. Chris· ented an.at.pm· clis'i'l~>r:-; of tll~ OrleQt. 'with bladt, tire rich with the poor, where good clerk of' 1p;?imin groc&>- llt<m>, nur- tensen, 0. C. Doke 1tnd Rue! Ander- ·It !s thus a tree hnJ1t go~n a11d ~vll 1' .t 1 .. son sbiped a eaP of -Rambouillet and fr u t:••· • <:1mrc h ' women were not t oo goo(I o mat·c:- l a 1 m · su.ed an armpd negro bandit wlto .had · -· t' in arm with the outcast of the streets. .. held 'up · and ' robbed the manag~ of llamp'sh:r:· rams~ to ?~~e~·- ' ·~~· Drunk with excitement, womeu and - girls set the store where -tim young man was Ogdcm-:'Pe.titioris ),'eqmisting.the city - • -A Lady ol D.istinctf.on the puce In the maddest r~vel the cities had ever employed at J<Jighteentlr aiHl Fedt>rat comm,issioners to 'open 'Gi·ant avenue lfS recognized by. the delirate,1:as~ln1\t· known. 1\lotor h·ucks und Ice wagons .became streets. from the Riven1.3Ie road on the.. south ing influence ot the perfume she uses. triumphal chariots where girls, still undaunted Albert Recken;lt<iff, · who 11\·es at of Ogden· to Ha~risvilie raa,d. 0~1 .t!1e A bath· with Cutlcura · .Sonp ·nnd ll0t from a hundn·d rnaulings, rolle m<triqe the null- 2122 South SPventeentlt s'treet, the north of the city,. thereby estabhs.lilng water to thoroughly clean!Se the por.as ators dfsregardlng the reckless display of silken c1erk, was outstde · .. the store, pt·epur- anoth.er artery of traf11~· wer~. phi'ced 1f o11·owed "lFY a_ dust1ng w I"" , ... · c aticura hosiery, or dung in clusters to the neck1i o:l' lng to bring Inside a supply of bt:ead in circulation Thu~sday. Ope,ning of TalN!tn powder.usually ,menQ.~ a cleat, drivers and passengers to keep from falling which had just been delivered. As he thi-.s street means merely th!l ,~reiitlon ' sweet, . healthy sldn.-lt<h·er.tisement:whlle they soundE•Ll their wild pean of victory. started insidP 1-te was warned · uwav of roads -a,t tlre tw<?· extrim)._i.ties. · ··~ .. . · '' ~ No, It was not a· pE:ace celebration, It was a vic- from- the <loor ot the fltore by a n~... Help ,_ tory rint. grn, who thrust 11 revolver in his ,face. Washington-A deatGhmimt of fifty. ·."Does your daug-IHer help any with Reserve and propdety were thrown to the Dodging una~r the nutn's·arm, B€ck- five marines, in~ charge, of two officers, the "' housf:'work ?" "' winds. Girls ht1gged and kissed men they ne-ver ershoff' gained the insi<le to find , a·n· was reported here ·as en route fr<>m I , '·She washes her \log." had seen before. l\Ien hugged and kiflsed girls otllPr negro rifling the cash register the marine ' corps base at San Diego ·to _•_:_---~-~ they never had seen before. 1\Ien and women who wlth one hand, while he kept ·tho! store Salt Lake City _to ·~stabllsb the postal ·I AI\long the rlru~s that are not lntbft. had touched no liquor before In their lives lm- mana~er, Atkinson, backed fnto the guard there. Blll.etmg. quart~rs for the . forfuln is <'astor oil. · b!bed In snl~ons .and from .bottles passed fr~ely corner•. "'itlt . a revolver, which he detachD!ent, which · 1s part or the 1 =.=,:::::::g::::::;:::::;====~;:-o~c:::":~-::=:::::: among the. crowds In tl!e stre~ts. A woman of point':d with the othe·r hand: _.,. Fourth regiment of ·mariiies; wm be ·• . sixty appeared riding through crow<le,d thoroughAs he saw Beckershoff upproaeh i:ought 'lh a Natioria1 Guai·d armory or far&s on a stoii~ mule. · swinging one or the louves of brea11, some other suifable place. The tr~s Ct Ut 1 , .. 1• · , , . 1 That \vas -c. • rmlstlce day in , Am. erlca. But he tied out of a side doo1· and ran win fed · at. restaurants · under co:1.Salt Lake y, at.- I married, was tn _ frail, delicate health before America was not alpne ·in her celebration. In north on Eighteenth street, with the tract. · with r.;:ins denoting Paris and In J.-opdon the same wild scene was young clerk 'in. hot ~ur:<ult.·. Jn the Salt Lake-= There are now.. ~ore_ ~t'u- ·[· · inward wiaitne·ss bE:Ing enacted. News of the signing o:t the mea!Jtlme the other negro who had .. dents registered at tbe U\li'l"ersity, of and Dr. Pierce's armistice by .Germany came to ~ondon as a. dis- ap.p.arently .n. ee1i placed at the door as Utah than , at an:v fall :qua,rt.e~· in Its Favprite P.res~ri,ptinct surprise. Up un tl! eleven o'clock of. that 11 1~ •o k -_ou t t o. k eep .<·us t omers on t of , hJ'stoJ·y. A total- of <>c52. stu.-den•s,... hon restored me (' · -to morning the streets were no.~mal. Peop. le . w.ere t 1le ,ten_ _, e.· b t>came fnghten<L.lJln.<J also cotlJt'ng from tb" n,..,;oJ·it.v "'"ro•· the·stl,ltes, ~ a per cct! v - d . ~~ well d' going aboUt their husin.ess UUdt'r the "otress of flt>d: B!>('({{'N:hoff finally lost Ius n:~an ·Of the. uniori and "' ,....., " illl n<.l·mawon Ifrom elevetl, fo,I_e lgn tion !<) that i'' no · Ion- R t r sufie'l'ed 'vai·tlrne pres15ure: whic)1 had borne ~pwn fo~ ro9re 1 In an alleyway seve~I squnre" nway countrieg are now·AJ.tte.n,ding qlass~~ - at ,_ ....'than four years. . • . . , J from the store · fr0m these tr~t .. l••. · · · · •· .. • · tile state iniititution.-- I:u numbers,1 v'" ~~ 'Then· sudden!y UreTe wus an explosion. A ter-l roaha leads'the list o.t stat~s baving. · After ·L married; I 1 I • rific silenve. 'Then :til j,ondon swept. e:n masse l Lo··n ' g Har·t :saaes z,:fe ' ., • • tc.ok·' Dr ..•. Picrce's t d t Lid Th s.l students «n the. Utah <;ft.rnpus. -Cali- L •. . ' • Favorite Prucrip1 t th t 8 n El rei:' s an ''!en w · e same louts, f. W H • b ·B " ·, k ·rornia, \V:yoming, Colrado, 4rizop.a· and tion as a •pedal tonic and nerv'ne durthe same wlth seething '·• ' • :.:0, · ·om-an .J.t . Y ·TlC Montana fnllon·" 1'n close .~~u~cession.. · · ds., T.;_. It noisE. The . st reet!'l filled • . .. ~ . l · ·mg· exp~tan t peno 1ten,- '·rn ' 1a t er human y and traffic halted. I• lags swirled •ever.yPh!lac!E?lp 1ua.~The fa~'t, tlu~t.- ,~he ..• ·. , . , j yean,' my health went down' and 1 don't where. Old women so!d them on the streets.. the bas clung to the .ol•i-fashioned c.t!Stom ~alt Lake-111;_ ~925, $'alt La~~ · •. re-] •t>etieve I would have' rome·thrtt at1all demand being almost as great for the Stars 1uH1 of "earing all her hair mav have ceived approximately 1,500,00 tona of ' had it not been for :Dr. Pierce's Favor· Stripes as for tllP llnlon •.Tack. _, snved_,tJJ~)l~f' of Miss Charlotte Ellis . freight, or a- daily'av~tage of 4l10 tons:· ite Rrescriptrt>Q."-Mrs. Jane· LD:..J..$6{ Hotels, clubs, t•afes and restaurants oYei'fl<lwed 1 of WalCion, ,·. Y. !'lli~R Ellis wtt>: wttJk-~ Of this amount 500,000 tons was'for- · .s.. S~nd St. •. West> ~. ,- • with joyous men !~ttd wom~n released from th~lr 1 lng on . ·i'hth Mreet" nPar '('ht'slnut warded. to other_ points near-by, a daily .~.5¢11~ lOc fo.r trial pkg. of tablets to war burden of more than four years. "The war when a brir:-1,, fallin~ 'from the twelftl;· 'aYerage .of J:i70 tons. · .' ' · · · pr. ?.re:ce. Buffalo.]';, Y . ,,. Is 0\'Ct'! Tl\e Wl'lr Is OYer!" . I stor)· a twarby b-uilfling; landed di- I Mytqn-T~o shipillCnts of rainbow On throu-gh the day and on 'throu~h the lltght ;· rectly oi1 hf'r head. ~he was .1:uslled.f tr?~t. were re~entlY, rec~iv~d .at. Verthe wild celeb~;atidn l)lun-ged until sheer exhaus-,· to the .Teff~rstJn ho>-1Ji.t-al, :~,;here it was nal. and distl·ibute,d in AShley _!}ud lion put an end to the fierce merrymaldng. On found she hall recelYed a .frnet.urell J Brush creeks. Twa thousand were the following morning- the large dining room o! 1 sltnll -and i,; in a· ·sprfous C•Htdition. p~a.,ced iri each creek _a,nd. the ones· in the Savoy hotel wu<r strewn with the tired bodle• 1· Phssiclan;:; ·>4ay that had ,;h~ ·not had u Ashley creek were d~posited ne·ar the of "'le~>plng men and wom{:n who, worn out ·with ! heavy head or hRir which pnrtlall:y Utah Power_ & Light company's rlant. the day's grE>at strain. dr<>f)ped In the1r trol'kS. softened tile hlow, f:he woul<) prob· Ed Oairs, Uintah county game warden, ably hn\'e heen i>llled IRstantly. accompanied the shipment. one of ot •· ., be I ° I . of' I .. |