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Show THE S A LINA SUN SAUNA UTAH Miss Lucy Tage Gaston, nationally known Reformer and foe of clgarets died in a synlturium at Chicago. Her health failed several months ago after she was injured In a street car accident and a malignant growth in her throat developed. Miss Gaston was conscious until 30 minutes ho. WEEKS fore she died. OMINENiPEOPLE !news Notes TELEGRAPHIC TALES FOR BUST READERS A RESUME OF THE DOINGS IN THIS AND 0THER COUNTRIES The state of Idaho, through its public utilities commission has filed fonnal complaint with the interstate at Washing Important Events of the Last Seven commerce commission ton alleging that Days Reported by Wire and Pre. existing rates on wheat from southern Idaho points to pared for the Benefit of the Portland are Reader unreasonable and ex Busy all-sta- WESTERN One man wee killed, severul ser. lonaly Injured and heavy damage done by a tornado which swept the country east and northeast of Huron, South Dakota. over the Passing city. the tornado dipped down at Interval to catch the towns of flavour, Iroquois, Yule, Osceola and Ban- croft. Indieaions that Ann Luther ae. tree would reopen her fight for $100,000 alleged breach of contract Against Jack F1, White, wealthy min-taman, came from Superior Judge J. M. York court at Ixs Angeles, the court granted the filing of stipulation extending the time for the actress to present a bill of to the reeent decision In which the suit was thrown out of court. Iler attorneys are given until September 13, to prepare the necessary papers. g H. A. Slevertson, absconding ressive. Plans for an r lightweight elimination tournament with ten en trants establish their seeking to elaims as title challengers have prac been completed ly Jame8 J. Johnson, head of the national sjorts alliance at New York. The show, will he held according to Johnson September 17 at the Queenshoro sta dium and will he for the benefit ot the relief fund of the alliance. man- ager of the Oreenriver Lumber company, who wag caught in Oregon sev. eral weeks ago lias entered the dls. trlct court at Greenriver, Wyoming and pleaded guilty. He wa8 given n Intermediate sentence of from two to seven years in the pen! A Dr. selfstyled Jekyl! and Mr. an unassuming youth of 2d Hyde to the blandly confessed police ot New York that he had caused ovei 100 incendiary fires on Manhattan island in ttie last few months Just to see the fire engines in action. Miss Catherine Ford, 61 years oi ngo, of Santa Barbara, Calif, plunged eight stories to her death from a window of the FonteneUe hotel at She was dead when Omaha, Neb, hotel attendants reached her body, clad In a nightgown on the sidewalk below. The blue laws of Livingston parish which among other things, banned the wearing of knickers by women, kissing and hugging in public and the one piece bathing suits, were repealed by the parish police jury, which recently put them into effect, according to advices received at New Orleans from Denhams Springs. September, S was the date fixed by Reports from the steel industry Judge J. Foster Symes of the district show that the mild improvement that court at Denver for hearings on the upset price for the Denver developed within the past few weeks has been continued. A Rio Production of Grande Western railroad which probably will be offered for steel for the country as a whole is now stated to be at nearer 50 than Aale' by auction. 45 per cent of capacity. Pig iron The grand jury at Los Angeles in prices are firmer. Those of steel dieted Kid McCoy, for products, however, still are somewhat the murder of Mrs. Theresa W, Mors heavy. here August 12 last. He also was James Eads How, known as the indicted for assault with intent to millionaire hobo of St. Louis, was murder and for robbery. married at Chicago to Miss Ingeberg The marriage The waterworks at Winton, a Union Sorenson. ceremony was performed by the Rev. Irwin St. Pacific coal camp near Rock Springs, John Tucker, formerly chairman of Wyo., are nearing completion, sever-a- ! of the contractors who have been the committee in charge of the disengaged upon the construction of dif- tribution of Mr. Hows gifts to hobo ferent section having been paid and organizations and relief association. The bride, who was secretary to Mr. their work accepted during the week. At the present time all of past the Haw, gave her age as 29, while he water used by this camp is hauled confessed to being 55. in by the railroad. Phebos and Demos, satellites of the The city of Casper, Wyoming clos- planet Mars, will be under (Observaed a deal for the purchase of 155 tion by the naval observatory at Washington during the present monacres of land just west of the city to th, when Mars will be closer to the be converted to park purposes in per- earth petuating the location of Old Fort hundredthan it has been for several years. Carpar, the first frontier outpost in this part of the state. A monument FOREIGN erected on the site of the old fort The negotiations of a treaty bewill be dedicated in September. tween soviet Russia and the British Because of the fire hazard which government at the recent conferenendangers the construction camps at ce in London was hailed as a triumboth east and west portal at the Mo- ph for the red diplomacy as a plenffat tunnel, the forestry service clos- ary meeting of the Moscow soviet. ed to all visitors the Colorado nation- The government will begin work on al forest at east portal and the Arap- the further details of the governahoe rational forest at west ment soon after the soviet dele portal, Colorado. More than 6000 acres is gation makes its report to the couninvolved in the closing of the Colo- cil of commissars. rado national forest and 1000 acres Princess Mary, daughter of King in the Arapahoe forest. Geoige and wife of Viscount Las celles, gave birth to her second child, GENERAL a son at Goldsborough hall, one of Engineer John IonnelI was erush. the seats of the Lascelles family. ed to death and Princess Mary was married to Vis Fireman Iee scalded, when the engine of count Lascelles in Westminster abbey passenger train No. 12, on the Bal- on February 28, 1922. Their first timore & Ohio, turned over in the child, jils-- a boy, was born in London railroad yards at Mitchell. Ind. The February 7. 1923, and was christened riiiladelphia National baseball team George Henry Hubert Lascelles. was on the train but escaped injury. Baveria holds the world record for The players were on route from St. beer drinking, with galLouis to Cincinnati. lons per person a year, according to a German statistician. Holland is ta a circular mailed Wdneslny with fifty four and next, from Cleveland to the 180.000 members of the Brotherhood of Railroad Train- gallons per capita. Ten years ago the average in England was thirty-onmen advice is glen the members reand f but now it garding political artion which will be amounts to thirty-nin- egallons, gallons. in the September Issue of repeated Crown Prince George of Saxony, the brotherhood's oMclal publication who has chosen the vocation of a la which President W. G. I.ie says he lies tn!:cn the position that our priest and was confirmed recently, officiated for the first time at Dresorgan taut ion should rot indorse Davis or I.a 1'oHette for prest. den in the court church which for centuries saw the pageants and pomp dent of the United States of his family and ancestors. Unqualified demand for the death The Viennese city authorities have penalty of Nathan F. Leopold, Jr.. ordered the cell in the prison at And Richard Loch, co murderers of occupied by Gabriei old Robert Franks, was made Prinzip, the murderer of the Archof Judge John R. Caverly at Chica- duke Francis Ferdinand, to be closgo when the state, through Thomas ed forever. It is more than ten years Marshall, assistant states attorney, since Prinzip committed the crime began final arguments in the long which more than any other single act legal battle. precipitated the world war. ton-tlar- fix-ta- Sim-mon- g s sixty-seve- n one-ha- lf e one-hal- Cool-Idg- e, 14-ye- ar The body of one of the bandits who held up G. W. Smith, paymaster for a Denver gravel contracting firm,, on tve outskirts of the city, was found Srn-lsa few miles from the scene of the robbery. The body had been riddled with bullets. Police four.d 11 veunds in it. The Prohibition party will wage its campaign on the merits of the party and net on the demerits of other parties, II. P. Faris, Prohibition party nominee for president, declared In an Address at Ssdalia, Mo. More than one hundred soldiers attacked and inpured a number of per sons in the Kalihi district of Honolulu in revenge for an assault upon a soldier by Civilian gangsters. and were called military police to quell tbe disturbance. No ar. rests were made. The French cabinet has unanimously approved the work of the French delegation at the international conference in London and thanked it fot the important results it has attain ed in the interests of France. : : Neal Gallatin of the VOTING IS HIGHEST DUTY From All Parts of $ UTAH ! Salt Lake City A resolution was passed by the directors of the State Federation of Womens Clubs at its If a man who makes two blades the Hotel Utah meeting recently at of grass to grow where grew only one mid forwarded to the board of parbefore Is a philanthropist and benedons, against the recent factor, what Is a woman who makes action protesting of that body in parolling to bubble a cold, sweet, refreshing George Parry. The vote was unanispring where was before but a wet mous. The resolution was signed by or a puddle? Here is the porplace trait of Neal Gallatin the pen name Mrs. E. O. Wattis of Ogden, state president of the federation, and was of Mrs. Donald Ogilbee of Casper, communicated to the newspapers by Wyo. one of the founders of the Mrs. N. A. Dunyon of the board of s of America, a new ordirectors of the state federation. soon which should have a ganization nation-widIt has no membership. Manti. John R. Nielson, Jr., ol officers, no constitution, no fees! And this city has been appointed executhere is just one way of joining the tive secretary of the Sanpete county elect. farm bureau. In addition to the You hunt up a spring neglected, secretary-treasurework Mr regular You out. forlorn, uninviting. dig it Nielson will do, he will also handle You line the bowl. Y'ou fix it so that its waters will run off and so the the field work in organization, memstorm waters will not drain In. Then bership drives, commercial work, etc. of the organization. you mark it Living Waters, of America, etc., according Ogden. A shipment of six carto instructions from headquarters loads of cattle, containing 145 head Oak (1004 Crest, Casper). So und so only shall you acquire the proud title of . steers, from Burl of It being a work of love, you can go as far as you like. You can put a Ruud of Grand valley, Idaho, drew canopy over your spring and make a walk to It. You can plant trees, shrubs, the highest price paid this year foi steers at the Ogden Union tlowers. lou can set up seats, table, oven. And you can put a sign beside the grass-fe- d stockyards this week. The price paid hot and dusty road bearing an arrow and the magic word, Spring. Or you may keep your secret except from the birds and wild tilings and was $7.75 a hundred pounds and the animals averaged $96.10 a head. a friend or two. Spring-Builde- rs Spring-Builder- e r, Spring-Builder- s three-year-ol- Spring-Builder- Mrs. J. W. Davis Well Known at Capital If fate should put Mrs. John W. Dnvis in the White House, the nation would have a First Lady of the Land who is at home as an experienced and charming hostess. She ulso has many friends in Washington. In her husbands regime as solicitor general she was a favorite In the official and diplomatic set. As Ellen Graham Rnssel, daughter of John and Martha Iassel of Clarksburg, W. Ya., she was identified as one of the Russel belles. The oldest sister married Percy Goff, a son of Senator Goff, who for many years represented West Virginia. Mrs. Goff died the first week of the Democratic convention and it Is for her that Mrs. Davis is now in mourning. Two other sisters married S. SI. Gallaher of Charleston. W. Va., and Philip Wutson of Indianapolis. In London, as the wife of the American ambassador, for two seasons Mrs. Davis was hostess at the American Luncheon (Tub, was honorary president of the American Womans club as well as member of Its board of managers and took an active part in other patriotic societies. Mrs. Davis is mainly identified in Washington with the Democratic National Women's dub of which she is a founder-membeMr. Davis had been a widower twelve years when they were married. His first wife. Miss Julia McDonald of Charlestown, W. Va., died in 1900, the year after their marriage, when their daughter, Julia, was born. Julia is now Mrs William McMillan Adams. Mr. Adams is representing the United States Rubber company in Copenhagen. r. d Salt Lake City. Governor Charles was renominated on the first ballot in the state Republican nominating convention, receiving 343 votes from a convention in which 419 votes were necessary to elect The fight between him and his twe opponents, William H. Wattis and Wiillam W. Seegmiller, was easily the feature of the convention as it hd been practically the sole item ol interest in the fight. Logan. As nearly as the companys officials can estimate, the Morgan Canning companys plant al Smithfield will this year put out 170.000 cases of peas. This falls 25.000 cases below last years output, due to the excessive dry season. The bean crop, the canning of which is about to begin, is pronounced fair and better results are expected. Cedar City. A large cave near Navajo lake was1 explored last week by a party of Cedar City men who, so far as known, were the first to venture far into its dark and watery recesses. The cave is located in some pink cliffs about one and a half miles northeast of Navajo lake and from it flows a large spring which joins the ndjth fork of the Virgin. R. Mabey - Somebody has said that the most Important letter In the alphabet is the letter X. because it is the letter or mark which Is placed on the ballot to Indicate how the citizen desires to vota and the character of men he desireo elected to office, says William II. Barr, president of the National Founders' association, In his weekly letter. To many of our citizens the marking of a ballot is a very inconsequential duty, done carelessly and with no particular thought of the fact that it is a sacred duty. The difficulty in our election of 1 procedure Is that not one-hal- f per cent of our citizens realize when they are handed a ballot and proceed to mark it that they are fulfilling the highest duty of a citizen and that they are really consummating the work begun at the battle of Lexington. The man who is willing to enjoy liberty but not willing to be responsible for its maintenance is not worthy of possessing it Compulsory voting is not particularly desirable. It would seem to be the negation of liberty. On the other hand. If it would bring home forcibly to the citizen the necessity of voting it might be a good tiling, but It is also-welto remember that making a man vote does not give him intelligence-enougto vote patriotically or with the best interests of the nation at heart. Every citizen who refrains front voting or refuses to vote is automatically interfering with the high destiny of the country. Bear this in mind next November and in the meantime dont forget that the primary election in your district is where real intelligent voting begins. l The Latin alliance, creation of of Spain and Italy, which is to Include South American countries,, but leaves out France, is still uppermost in the minds of Argentine newsLa Prensa, leading paper writers. journal of the Argentine republic, says that the forthcoming press conference in Madrid is of far greater importance to South American countries than the International Press conference to be held in the United States, where only the publishers of North and South America are to meet In convention. Sentiment between the old and the new world is a fine thing. But South Americas destiny is closely linked up with that of tlie United States and all lands in this hemisphere. Some day the people of the United States, and especially the bankers, industrialists and captains of commerce are going to realize this, says the Atlanta Constitution. And another thing : South America ought to know that the play between Spain and the new world has nearly always been a losing one. Ogden. H. W. McCarty, deputy Lieutenants Macready and Stevens collector of internal revenue has been of the army air service ascended in an assigned to the Ogden office of the airplane 32,220 feet above Dayton, internal revenue department, sucOhio, a few weeks ngo. At that height ceeding A. G. Gundersen, who was in the airplane was invisible from the charge temporarily after the deparWhen they looked down ground. ture of J. C. Littlefield, who acceptwas obscured by a blue haze. Yet ed a position as claims examiner of the veterans bureau at the district they snapped their camera several times and obtained remarkable photooffice in Denver. IIow much shall we have to pay graphs of the city pictures in which The Utah Agricultural the buildings, even the automobiles in Logan. Mexico for dainnges caused hy the Vera Cruz occupation which did not college will open for the fall quarter the streets, were defined clearly. That secure a Mexican salute to the flag September 29, according to an anwere able to make pictures of obnouncement contained within the gen- they and by the Pershing punitive expeInvisible to them was due to dition which did not get Villa dead eral catalog issued by the college, jects three factors an or alive? It remains to he seen. And which is just off the press. film and a minus camera, how much shall Mexico have to pay Logan. Special committees were blue" ray filter that absorbed the us for damages In the various revolutions from 1910 to 1920? That also appointed recently by the board of ground haze. No aerial photograph directors of the chamber of commer- ever before had been made from such remains to be seen. Anyway, Ambassador Charles B. Warren lias just re- ce to aid in securing funds for the a height as six miles. signed, on the ground that his work Is equipment of the Cornegie library, to finished. And one result of confer- outline and conduct a program for Out of every $1 invited in their ences In Mexico last year In, which ho the observance of National Defense business by farmers. So cents is tied and John Barton Payne represented ay, and to arrange for a program up in real estate. This is largely rethe United States is that two claims for entertaining the Salt Lake busicommissions are at work settling the ness men who will visit with tha sponsible for the slowness with which 'hamber of commerce on September agriculture lias been readjusting itself foregoing questions. On its part the United States govto 1st. So says conditions. ernment has named Nathan L. Miller Dr. L. C. Gray, economist of the DeProvo. C. S. Leaf, expert swim(portrait herewith), former governor of Agriculture. In many secmer and instructor at the Provo high partment of New York, who was also a former tions of the country land speculation chool, successfully swam across judge of the Court of Appeals, for the has played greater havoc with farm general commission, and Ernest It. Perry of Lincoln, Neh.. a former judge, for Utah lake, a distance of eight miles. than has overproduction of prosperity the special commission. The sjeeial commission will deal with and decide Cloyd Booth, one of Leafs pupils, upon all claims against Mexico caused by the series of revolutions from 1910 swam with him for all but one mile crops. Another thing, farming is the to 1920. The general commission will adjudicate upon nil claims in at the beginning. The swim was only remaining basic industry that opgeneral. n,e committee of congress at Washington which investigated these claims in made in four hours and thirty-fiv- e erates under almost unrestricted com1923 announced that the total amount of them would be $605,002,434. is said and be to the record petition. minutes, long distance fresh water swim of the state. the-cit- U. S.-Mexi- Claims to Be Balanced can iMiiNUlWlIkllMSilllliN extra-long-foc- super-spee- d after-the-w- Newlon Nov Heads National Educators Denver Is taking days over the election on airs these of Jesse H. Newlon ns president of the National Education association, for he was its of ' schools, superintendent last year under a five-yecontract. The National Education association is composed of 130,(100 educators represenring the public school system of the country. Newlon was horn at Salem, Ind., July 10, 1 S,X2. He was graduated from Indiana university in 1907, and In 1914 from Columbia university, where he took his master's degree in school administration. After teaching in Indiana and Illinois he went to Lincoln, Neb., where he was superintendent of Then he went to schools, 1917-20- . Denver. With Charles II. Johnston and Frank G. Picked he is Joint ru thor of a book entitled: Administration of Junior and Senior High Schools," and has contributed numerous articles to educational periodicals. He Is a member of the Nationul Coun ell of Education and the National Society for the Study of Education. lie if also a member of the Delta Upsilon, Phi Kappa Delta and Kaptva Delta P) fraternities, and of the Rotary ;lub. Castlegate. The Castle highway is to be kept open during the coming winter, the Duchesne county commissioners and the government garage people at Price having concluded a deal by which this will be done. Gate-Du-ches- Ogden. Theron Robison, Universi- ty of Idaho student, who received a broken neck while diving in the swimming pool at Como Spring resort in Morgan, died at the Dee hospital. Living nearly three days with the broken neck was considered remarkable by the physicians. The doctor entered the patient's room according to habit, read the chart first thing. He was not a little surprised to read: 3 a. m. Patient very restless; nurse sleeping soundly. In the morning and. trip? Greene No, she keeps will know BUSINESS COLLEGES iTarBUNEsTcOLL All commercial brunch. School of Efficiency. Catalog free. 60 N. Main St, Salt Lak Ciiy. BOOKS AND SHORT ROOKS An,r p.wrrt on want Book Co. 44 STORIES hy iril, C. O. East So. Temple worrying If her when she D SONGS A SHEET MUSIC SONGS new and old. All kind. Sheet music by mail. COL). Heeeley Muaic Co. 47 S Main pmcratoTai Salt h Lumber Lake Box SUITS & DRESSES Co. CRATES 619 So. 5th West CLEANED & DYED Up to the minute Cleaning and Dyeing Return postage paid Regal Cleaning ft Dyeing Co.. 156 E. 2nd So. Say it With Flowers Her Worry Is your wife enjoying her the canary bird gets home. rvie and quirk return To uaura prompt I theee advertisement mention the nsme of hie paper. FRUIT BOXES ft VEGETABLE Facetious Patient Browne Salt Lake City Firms Fresh Cut Flowers at All Times Hobdays Flower Shop Keith F.mporium Bldg. Salt Lake |