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Show The Salt Lake Telegram. TUESDAY EVENING, SEPTEMBER 1, 1003. TT H T 1 fr i mrv is ' i I r rlLlHi w. ir m m mm NEW ELECTRIC ROAD FRbWI SES AID January 000 Eeed Smoot Is Said to Be Back of Plan to Build From Spring-vill- e 00000-000- CITIZENS MUST AID INSPECTORS. an electrical road through this county. The road Is to run from Sprlngvllle to Logan by way of Provo. Salt Jke and Brigham City. The promoters have already secured franchises through Utah county and Davis -- nd Weber counties will next be asked for the same privilege. The franchise a?k for miles of track In this county, and forty the promoters miles of promise to have seventy-fiv- e their road in operation In two years. The sanitary inspectors, food inspector and the health officials are doing all within their power to stop 'the progress of typhoid, but it Is impossible for them to cover the entire city every day. If all the citi zens would with them, make front yards out of their back yards and see that all garbage and other disease-breedin- g matter Is hauled away, the disease will be stamped out, but just as long as the citizens persist in allowing unsanitary conditions to exist on their prem- ises, just so Ion-- will the disease of typhoid fever continue to claim its S victims. SANITAPT INSPECTOR ROBERT BUDGE TO THE TELE- co-oper- ate "n The Rev. Richard Wake has bten apcorresponding secretary The permanent headquarters and the exact character of 1'terature that will be pub- - lb In many Instances where cases of typhoid fever have developed this month the afflicted need not go far to find the breeding place of the germs, which cause their disease. A Telegram reporter yesterday afternoon accompanied a sanitary inspector on his rounds in some portions of the residence and business districts. In the latter named section sanitary conditions were found to be in anything but a proper condition. Persons who live cn some of the premises that were inspected, fcaid that they were only renting the houses and that it was nothing to them how dirty the yard was. In two instances the renters stoutly denied that their premises were dirty when the entire yards were covered w..h garbage and filth of the worst kind. The first premises visited were on Third Est just below Third South. Three adjoining lots and as many houses were all inspected. In one an exceedingly unhealthy sink was found and in another a leaky hydrant was located. The water had leaked out of the pipe and formed a stagnant pool, around which the bugs and flies were flitting. But the back of the yards was the worst. In each instance an outhouse was found in sickening condition. Watermelon and muskmelon rinds, black with hordes of flies, lay scattered all around. The other two places were similarly dirty. . Victoria Alley the Worst. Several places on Victoria alley were next visited. A veritable hotbed of disease was found in every instance, while the stench which permeated the atmosphere was simply nauseating.. One place that is particularly vile is directly back of one of the biggest hotels in the city. A thousand and one tin cans, melon rinds galore, .refuse from the kitchen were found reeking with maggots and insect life. The stench from this as- - HELPED TO BUILD FAMOUS OLD WALL i Fred Willis, Who Died Yesterday, Aided in Making Early History of Salt Lake. Y 00000 sortment of disease breeding material Is wafted up to the windows of the hotel. The alley running north from Second South, just west of the Commercial block, was the next place visited. This passage is the dumping ground of Main street business houses and the Commercial street resorts and is awful from one end to the other. The restaurants contribute to this smell by their refuse from the kitchen in dumping the back yards. Four toilets were visited and ordered cleaned and two grease traps were serveu In a similar manner. Five premises on North First West were found in similar unsanitary con- me BARTENDER GUILTY OF USING BLINDS Jury Convicts Henry Slater on Charge of Covering the Windows on TM Mine and Mill Strike. f -- Telluride, Colo., Sept. 1. Notices were posted yesterday tocalling on all millmen in Telluride work this stop morning. This is the result of the re fusal of the mill managers to concede an eight-hoday with some reduction in miners cf the district had alpay. The ready been notified to strike today, in sympathy with the millmen of ur Du-rar.- o. Devoured by Worms. Children often cry, not from pain, but from hunger, although fed abundantly. The entire trouble arises from inanition; their food is not assimilated, but devoured by .worms. A few doses of White's Cream Vermifuge will cause them to ceaso crying and begin to thrive at once, very much tc the surprise and joy of the mother. 25c at Z. C. M. L Tti hf w txty I ho not tr II Wv'i54 It wouM fn would jirnti nearly J.it hS r;tni f r .! tt lhrah I.lni r f tiii: In iw fmrr.lr.R. riki tti All rarr? I ! ihr J llTtHJ-,- if U'fl tt tan-.r!f- n . II- - in Tt-ff-t t.i).r -- tiU i t t.r'oti fK cr.f ff c rr.f . r, c ?ini..t. f. At tttm i?f. , tK.:i--i;tii- r." t i j t :s i. -- la thiif, tfoi I ta -- .hf;f. ti ir -- nth!nr cf r if cbif.e- i fr; ;.,ti n tf f i: h l!i.I C"anll-'-I -i- 1 f !tre i. JV'sii.t.i tufit' f taia w . I ft .t -- f'U! n-- j t f f it a ar ?r,,. d At - e 1 4 s. t?r.n er 4 3lf'J trrr.f w r a i t it ?jn I ? f." I 1 . sr i ? J ', t'- -I ! .'!.t wr 5 e i; f t; " r .! - ,V3 r f i "I f i r' a' ' 4 "--- i- if rr n r ; ji I Cr-?- , j'nttt.fr f !?:. I "' 5 e L4tr, If si J rr i-- f is -- -.. Jt w.;., a. . I.. a N'nf n, Claw-"truc- I j r t f: ,'. Ul nine-year-o- m fji th f xri ?( z: t r r g ' i tfieC' n rr i w-;- h! f. t p. Th l: v. inward Yjk c & ft v) '.i Jack Clawson. ton of Dr. S. II. Claw-so,.i .i ,'i !.i i; Strange That Disease Is Not Worse. .. Ihtr y, a rrfotaf 4t is a hero, and but J'fln-t- l CUttston Two houses on First West just below h" of.rS r.f 1?. buffftti. around th" lrdy. for him a Fifth South were found, where it is litit boy who?e to and r wht him in th Ptmrh ,ift-i;h I i. nri-tle short of a miracle that all the inhabname could not be learned would probI it I.j r ufilJ.".tf tb f. had nl.jvrt Kon down. (" r.n fttmn-c- l bth itants are not sick of some disease. ably have been drowned. d. ii nd air.t: hi rip on the otht-- r Hon t.b! Both houses occupy tBe same lot. one hnr-went ;,.! j t h . riirrh tx". artl. The fellow was bathing near the Tn-Sj!ti th" being In the rear of the other. The front Th nrnre and e.iv nr yard looks fairly presentable but the Sahair bridge In the river and not bef4h-wh- n -- l t.l I'.-.J- - .4rca k ld ? -i 1 rc-- -- 1 1 1 1 nlne-year-o- back yard Is "something fierce." Apples in various stages of decomposition litter the place, the hydrant leaks and a stagnant pool, full of "wrigglers." is around the pipe; a chicken yard about six inches deep with garbage, melon rinds, cabbage leaves, potato peelings and manure fairly teems with vermin. n outhouse, almost unapproachable, is also on the place. Directly north of the rear house is a barn and a corral in which a cow is kept penned closely, and which until recently contained eighteen Inches of manure. A dozen other places were visited and similar unsanitary conditions noted at every place. With these conditions existing It Is little wonder, say the Inspectors, that persons are taken sick with typhoid fever. These places are veritable hotbeds for the propagation of disease germs. The common house fly is also a carrier of germs. They are In all great these places of filth and carry the microbes on their wings and legs, oftentimes depositing them upon the food of nearby residents. tin 1 bl cry for r yond his depth. He began to scrim for help, but other boys on lh edge, believing him to be "shamming," would not go to his aid. Jack CiauMMi saw that the boy wns In earnest, and dived out for him. He grasped him. but the frightened boy wr.l for ,IK.in h1j. t;.v.(n him. but wn alnio mtnnzh- 1 - t- h-- r . o xr .. MCOICINK .i ft a Drtrrtsu BEST FOR THE BOWFJLS li-.r- t : Tl .... k at pt t. uhtn fr;,j V.Ar.xn it; fr'n a c lit t5?r-- J. t : t.. t.i tn t ': t?. . ' ,t r . fcrti'r ffts a ','r.'rt! res r t''f , r !.ur h. Tl.' M"rn-f- f.: u t;j a t : t rf t 1 II n i-- i . a: rt t ? r y ff ts i. fi !" ' frril'i?.ij ftr.-J- vrf ft-,- . ... I ?r .,fr : 5 II 4 -, i feH-ft- , : . pirii ihr r - ;.':. - ll.oy Ar. . ,j3 T-- tl t . tk f,i.?jM. rivr !!.-ii. n?. i nm ktr r in'!'. gcgasasBmi,. l to th n f'.'f :J ... . I. r i . . At r ,x o hi ui.;,''u..ur.iCi) I 25c, 50c hit lr.djir.l. tv nif r j Ti,yr.t all t 10c. 1 h' . . f r';c;ii I -- FAVORITE 4 U.j-..S!?- rr-'di- J- - 4 ;.t t O ar - (t . t " ...... rr .. .hi r; f ? v . in. Saturday. , fefci j Ii i ft "t, WEEK. Such was the information received in a telegram sent to Edward McCarrick of this city by David CJelder, a brother-in-laof the deceased. Further details could not be learned. OKI-AT- w wytut came here In IVsl, and had a large jewelry businers. He re- mained here for seven years, when n went to Chicago, where ho lived until the time of his death. lie is survived by a wile and one son, who is 21 yoars of age. Mr. Wyatt was born in and was 58 years old. He cam-- -Tendon, to America in 18S0. and settled in Chicago, llo 'h married there to Miss Fannie GeMer of .Aiex h. A mother found out what a rhanw of food can do for a whole family, from the nursing baby to the adults, in this way: "Twice during the summer months my baby was taken violently ill and was over the attacks. Hi very slow former dietgetting of cow's milk alone ceased to agree with him so I combined It with an expensive infant's food but he soon be- came very much constipated. "Then I shifted to Grape-Xut- s food and found that this was just what baby needed, adding it to his milk after Foft- ening in hot water. Baby has thrivrd upon this food and is now healthy and strong and chubby as any mother ask which you know is saying a could great "It did not take me long to .d out that a saucer of Grane-iSTnt- e , or., JUJis neeaea by the tired nernai vous mother and I have also to my own satisfaction that whenproved the chil dren are old enough to chew Grape-Nut- s It is far better for them than or any other mushy foods for it oatmeal develops their teeth and helps their digestion their minds seem much brighter and and more active too. "Truly here is a wonderful food and one for the entire family." Name by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich.given There's a reason. Look in each package for a copy of WeUvUle"S ,"The Koad to ST SLATOHTI-- T. Ol HOVS' f 'LOTIIING ON CnOICF. ALL HOYS KXlti: SUITS, $3.r,n, ti.no Suits, clioice this C!9 ' ... eek : ciiokt; : hoys eiioire ATsTs Suits, ; tliis Jk A' ' ' LA i'P 2 srm C00D clou Your last chance, we don't Hov.h new store. WK SEE KIXOi:i. nit week ' nyCIIv clothes at ot Till IK FINISH. MEN'S SFITS, mostly of tho Alfn.1 To, make, divithil into two lots, all SMjhk sir. tin $lf,nn Suits, choice this Ih-njam- week at 'All in . lS.no, $20.00 or S22.r0 Suits, choice this vek at ... $9.98 About H00 suits left, tnelucles Idues and Marks, ht nnd heavy weights. One dollar will do imm than k of two. Take advantage while the opportunity li-- tin-wor- ; j ; ! i j i : ' Lorrtci CUtbti r MtH lasts. MEN'S PANTS 200 pairs, sizes 34 waist to HO waist all S,Tr0, 4.00 and 5.00 Pants, (I? rtO Choice this week at Choice of nil 0.00, .$7.00 or this week at D $S.OO Pants L.jO II A WES HATS what wr haTC left at ...... Larp slzrs ni'-u'- s Hhf r.toi-- lit Tn:dTi ar worth up to 751 thin wik for .. A golden ctpHirtunity to nnppjy ynnr - .t!.nu: sj 9d:c i ' f.-- ' - bk REMOVAL NEW STORE 154 MAIN. ..... ? to into our ncw 8torc UU ccu I nnt? CfnMnt the coriM quicc.. ir. cunUWi t " of future permission occupnnt of thin Ktorr vi will continue herv ancith.r wirl At that time we must vacate. It's a benefit for the ClenrraJ Puili. it raPans von nt th. nn,:l, r rl,n greatest and mot nnheanl of valuo ever ofTenil in Salt Lake IX MKN'S AND UoVs CI tjTIUNc; A"xi u rUKMiSIIINUS. FOH ONE Expc:1 Ry , f ' Chicago. Alex S. Wyatt, formerly in the Jewelry business here, but more recently of Chicago, was accidentally killed while cleaning a revolver in the latter place-las-t ;y 'sa C08J.LDN T DO Alex Wyatt, Former Salt Laker, Is Killed in kJ 1 n th-S- it:ii; ACCIDEN HL I 11 - l DE ATH BY ft E irK.-iinlr.- Cj7 THE FAMILY'S II .Er'--isr.v- . .y. "S3" m Qo1aTa f ; i tr.if.f r t' (ho rlly mf , i; i by thi MruKjclrs of ih Ca!n Ijifor n t the rly. tb 'i?.r'!lrj had to relemin him nod po to the tkti'i u ?'."i th" " rhuuh. n' but aflor hi brr.l h ac .In! burr. ii ; to t i ?;.-went for the drovu.lnK lx y. who t v almost ur.ronur o to M.-tronght o t? it nr,d the phore. Th other l rjf worked t.n hint an hour before rtorJnsr hirn. .V t tr' " y - hand. Guests of Dr. Helmick. William Freeze, wife, son and daughHenry Slater, a bartender in the sa- ter of Adair, la., former parishioner? loon of Hayes & Regan, on Commercial of the llev. D. M. Helmick of IUif street, was found guilty of having vio- church, who have been sightseeing AVcst, are his guests at tho lated the ordinance providing that on through the SIT K. First South street. parsonage, Sunday no blinds or screens shall ob- Mr. Freeze and family are delighted struct from the sidekalks on the out- with Salt Lake City. They start for side a complete view of the interior of their Iowa home tonight. places where liquors are sold. The case was tried by a jury, which FOUND OUT found Slater guilty. Sentence will be Tanner Wednesday What a Mother Found Out About passed by Judge afternoon at 2 o'clock., Food. able to extract them. wrk fn!b--n mlf :onar FEARED A WHIPPING .y IF HIS NAME GOT ,v INTO THE PAPERS, . Beyond His Depth. fifteen-yeur-o- 0 f 1 w ttr't f. River Three Times to Rescue Drowning Child, Sunday. Missoula, Mont., Sept. 1. Mrs. Cahoon of the Big Flat, was accidentally shot today while out berrying with a neighbor, Mrs. Lewis. The two ladles were men were huntpicking berries Aand the flew grouse up and Mr. ing close by. Lewis shot at the bird, killing it. Mrs. Cahoon was in range, though unknowii to Mr. Lewis, and two of the shot struck her, one in the hip and the other in the arm. The shot buried themselves so deeply in the flesh that it was with difficulty that Dr. Parsons, who was called, was tir t :.. -- ?;r: i A SfJJfT- fVi HERO SAVES SMALL BOY'S LIFE Jack Clawson Goes Into Chicago. Woman Shot by Hunter. den?-trir- J, LD ditions. G. Fred G. Willis, who died yesterday, was one of those who aided in the building of the wall around Temple square. The deceased was a native of Cardiff. Wales, and had lived here for more than fifty years. When he was 14 years old he was engaged to help build the famous wall. Later he aided in the construction of residences. many of the old-tiHe was for many years a member of the Mormon church, but recently he joined the Episcopal church. He left four sons and a daughter. The funeral was held at 3 o'clock this afternoon from the family residence, 311 South Fifth East street. item with , t .:.Jy. FTEEN-YEAR-O- in Merman a It-;- -- H tit- cirrus- t,fUlf. Mnrrr.on AtlUlr of Faith Rf4 r,thr at 4'ftrlbmM f r (clztt ar.-- .vlu r 'r' tiSisr rrcattrr. tlj - GRAM. t y pointed of Severe Dr. Miles' Heart Cure-ICured Me. .flf t.f f !ft1 Ce at rtrnfl. t , of thr hurrau i J.4lf !, T. circular cnlltt mifnlirs to th m Mormon lrar-ar,I m;i Im nd of worker bait to in ictvt Morm-r-- "he Worr.in'st Missionary union of Sr.lt Lake unci the t'tah Ministerial Association ar? to establish a Gentile bu reau of Information. fi ! Heart Trouble. Obtained No Relief Until I Tried -d -- M Yc a rs Trt frcmr! cmrr.:!! which wJU in i baric cf !!--, b f a 4 ban ! A clff-uLvvhi-:5n whSrh th b h 1 CtltCULAK TELLS WHY JiEW BUREAU IS NEEDED HE BE, Religious Workers of Salt Lake Purpose to Establish a Bureau of Information. Non-Morm- on " - A 'o A petition was presented to the County Commissioners yesterday afternoon by F. P. Stcffey, Mllando Pratt and F. M. Lyman, Jr.. who are said to be the representatives of Senator Reed Smoot, in which they asked for a franchise for 0000000000 0 & to Logan. Inspectors Find Back Yards and Alleys in Heart of City, Hotbeds of Disease. - " GENTILES WILL EXPLAIN UTAH TO THE TOURIST THROUGH SALT LAKE OF TYPHOID " ""' - 1 mm mm LAST OLD STORE CZ3 CM iAi 122 MAIN. |