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Show I THE SALT L.AJlHi C1T1', UTAH, THURSDAY, AFK1L HERALD-REPUBLICA- N, lyib (5, n OGDEN DE PARTMENT I D. J. Greenwell. Correspondent. 1641 Washington avenue. Tela. 815 or I151.R. J Circulation Tepartmnt. 420 Twenty 'fifth street. Telephone 9X&. I ! SPOKE Ifl TENOR VOICE 'I'm After Mney and Want No W. Jacobus Van Emmerick Jewelry He Sang Out to Makes These Allegations Surprised Passengers. in Divorce Petition. ' i In"! f f - ' V i " I V" -' j- : - I , ' U I J tPF'fUl tf The Oacden, ArHl 5. The twenty-on- e on the Overland Limlirrt, the Unton raclUc rie luxe train, which was l - . - y (ten IlrH-npiM!''n.'- IS pee U I pas-nenK- en robbed tv j. bandit near 'heynne, made a dah for the Wyo,n laat lght. on arrival here to obtain Information as to the robbery, concernwhich they had only a haasy Idea, ing smooth!?' did the bandit work. to John Johnson, a porter in the observation car. .says the bandit, a t.lll. blender young man of IlKht complexion, climbed ur'on th observation platform shortly after. the train left Oorlett Junction. "I'm after money and want no the bandit ald In a tenor voice, to the porter. Intimidating according th seven occupant of the car with a obtained a wallet iitol the oandit 14 from II. II. OHrien containingsmill chant; from other and "riic In a few minutes, according his raid and to the porter, he finished car platform. Johnjumped over the son says the bandit worked without and he assistance from train employees of a flagman nothing says lie knnftH the bellcord. cutting M. J. McOonagle, the train stenograwho travels from Chicago to pher, the San FrunHco. M'ould not discuss that hein was called robberv. but defied collecting upon to assist the robber toli from thesaid passenger. Mr. O'ltrlen left, the Trainmen also trsin at Iaramle and other victims left the train at Wyoming town. Arrested. Many ". AuthorApril Wyo.. Cheyenne, without tangible ities toniRUt wi-i- ; of the lone bandit, clews as to identity who last nUht 1robbed several passenpassenjier train gers 1 on Ln.on aciric weatbound. a few minutes after No. n out of the station here, I'if-tIt pull-tlie were arrested during siumects . lalej". were day. but all I:ilev Ison--heldJoepending of his preseuce tory explanations near here. when at Corltt Junction, The authe robbery was committed. the belter that he thorities expressed the information iaect u xi-ep- t at-isf- a. concerning might have robber's Identity. A total of ihbOO in rewards has been offered for capture of the robber. Of In the Union Pacific headquarters this, Late today the umalM offered $5000.added 5'0 to tle state of Wyotrlng reward. in theii The authorities were aided by "bv a description furnished saw March I letter i:obl;ailIe. switchman, who ku man awing aboard the train 2JV ards station. This defrom the Chevriine the belief to confirm teiwerl scription robber wa the same as the the that train one who held up a Union Tacific; near Green River February . to authorities here Kevi.-f-d at $oS the total booty secured placed five men taken from and a zold watch, women In the obserTwo priena:er. vation car at the time were not molested. rrr-or- t Hera'd-Republtean- .l a divorce April 5. In "W. filed by Jacobus Emmerick against Mrs. Amoluine Van Hmmerlck. the husband chaws that the wife attempted to poison him: that because of physical she has superior been cruel to him strength and he asks that the $10,000 prop- Author of hr Jew-elrv- ," r. The 0DKX. Van new-tand- psis-sence- P I the wife owns be divided beerty tween them. Shortly after their marrlape, Januarv 23, 191.1, the husband declares his wife kicked him out of bed and otherwise mistreated him. Later, he asserts, she gave him a, because he was .unable to beatingtwo worn out shof-sWhile repair he was sick in bed. he further sue at- J - on to Tlie fSpeeia.1 Herald-RepuWican.- Upon hearing a story of misfortune related by John Xash, Ogden. April 6. charged with a felony in connection with the removal of- copper binding cables from the Ogden. Logan & Idaho Imrailway tracks. Judge X. J. Harris senposed a six months" countv jail tence only, after Nash - had pleaded guilty. Nash said he had a wife and six children living In Wilson, west of Ogden. and had been out of employment since the Ogden. sugar factory closed. Herbert Kilej-- who pleaded guiltv to a charge of forgery before Judge Harris, is to receive sentence April 11. PATTKnsoX IS nR.tl). 6. Jennie Ogden, Patterson April aged 11 years, granddaughted of Alex! Patterson of died yesterday in Twin Falls, Clinton, to Information according received here. The girl was the of the late 51. A. daughter who was killed four months Patterson, in an automobile accident at a agorailway near Twin Falls. The grandcrossing father Wii bring. the body to Ogden for burial. ItXTSTO OF TIIKFT. 5. March Ogden. After several months Deputy Sheriff Oren lladlock Louis arrested Rosl. a Mexican, charged with having robbed James Pur-me- t, a stockyards employee, of In the Grand saloon here last falL The Mexican. It is alleged, had just served a sentence in the city jail. Purmet is thoughtIn to be working at the stockSalt yards and Is sought as the complainingLke witness. ji:mk . J roit ni:i.irM. Ogden. April 6. Residents of Ogden nave again been called to contribute to the relief of upon the destitute SMITH AVERS INNOCENCE In Reltrlum. At t ha rtnimil r, f mission for the relief of Relglum and or me American Revomueniers Abbot Indeterminate Sentence oit in? Cilvra lution. R. Ileywood isMayor I name of Hebbery. a proclamation calling sued upon local f?pec;ai to The residents for contributions. The mavor to the 5. am "I heads the subscription lists with $50. going Ogden. Aprilan said man." Innocent N. penitentiary J. Harris NEW CHAPEL Frank .Smith inwas Judge FOR VERNAL court when he given an indeterCounsel minate sentence for robberv. Tor Smith presented an affidavit by Will lie Used for Sunday School and In the W. II. Lightfoot. a prisoner .l eotintv jail, who says George Worthlng-ton- . "state's witness against Smith, had told him an Ogden policeman abused him until he agreed to testify was Worthlnston aaainst Smith. charred with robbery as originally Smith's accomplice. MINOR OGDEN to The April 5. Special I ITEMS IleraM-Republica- Suit to recover Ogden. sag brought today by William against Gust Kallas. a prisoner Paleches avers in the county Jail. Kallas obtained that amount from his account In the Security State bank. Kallas is charged with having: raised a check from $100 to $0'. t. nme Weher rieleKnte. F. .1. chairman of the Progressive Weber county central committee, issued notice that a primary will be held at S o'clock Friday evening in the office of Ilobert W. A gee, 21 38o Washington avenue, to elect seventy-twdelegates at large to represent Weber county at the Progressive state convention held In the Jrand theatre in Salt Lake City. Saturday, April R. . line Mnrrlnur l.leense Anderlicense was isud to Lorenzomarriage son f "mien and Ldia C. Bailey of North Ogden. Fa-lech- Ilen-dcrsho- to-b- e Amusement Hall. (Special to The ' IUrald-Repnblica- Vernal. April 5. The Second ward of the Mormon church at this place will erect this year a modern chapel and Sunday school home, with amusement hall facilities in connection. The cost is estimated at $20,000. The location will be close to the center of the The building committee is headedcity by State Representative Enos Rennlon, with Anton C. S. Carter, Jr., Strebel, and A. Theodore Johnson, head of the mechanical arts department of the Uintah academy, as members as PR0V0 NEWS NOTES Special to Tlie naraM-nepubllcan.- l Provo. April 5. a f":::" v AH it you ' - " f i v v v ' r ; .'. ..;:. r' EOCT-T- - 1 Wk W JOHN DRISCOLL. of Hampton, Va., is O the last survivor of the old U. S. S Monitor, conqueror of the Merrimac in the Civil war; After the famous naval battle. President Lincoln summoned the Monitor's crew to Washington and told them if anyone ever wanted a favor it would only be necessary to ask for it. Driseoll. ' now 76. never asked anything of the United States until recently, when he told the navy department a trip through the Panama canal on a warship before he died would make him happy. The promise will be made good and he will sail on the next ship to take the passage. Plan W m have - m m M for Rig by (Ida.! Structure Ac eeptedi Ilulldlng to Cost S25.000. Special to The Herald-HepubMca- a. The executive nigby, Ida.. April committee of Rlgby stake tabernacle for the accepted plans todav were drawn proposed bv Mc nuiiding. pjans Grew & Sunderland of Idaho Falls. Bids for construction of the building are being advertised. It is declared it will be the handsomest and most up to date building of its kind In this or the state. part The structure will cost $25,000. Sub for the erection of the build scrlptions are now coming in in better meas lnr ure than the committee nad hoped for Lach ward of the fourteen that com prise the stake has been assessed i proportionate amount. Gentiles of the county have also subscribed liberally. 5. FLOOD It's of the pioneer West; of horse thieves and gun play; of a girl who could ride and shoot and love; of a man who ventured his life for months to capture a magnificent wild stallion; of that stallion, and the terrific race he ran against forest fire to save two lives. The Country Gentleman covers every interest of the farm good reading as well as good ideas. It is for the wife as well as for the farmer. In this issue begins DEFENSE PLANNED All Ahlebodled Men In Vernal Will Contribute Labor (o Fortify Ashley River. Special to The llerakl'ItepuMlcan. Vernal. April 5. A . movement for has been started by citipublic zens ofsafety Vernal nnd farmers of Ashley Th snowfall valley. unprecedented will undoubtedly rethe past winter sult In very high water in the Ashley river this spring. The river supplies the five irrigation canal systems, one of which supplies water for Vernal. To protect these sources of water supply from spring' floods men in all walks are to give three days' labor ofsjlfe of the public. The for the protection has been cleared of rock river channel reefs and miles of heavy riprap has been built in danger points, which it Is expected will go a long way toward controllng the flood waters during the danger period. The Provo Commercial club at held In the meeting cafe today, started a movement Spencer an incinerator for and plant for provo. the committee on sanitation and public was welfare appointed to confer with the city officials and the Civic league to obtain better garbage conditions. Jack V. Taylor of Ixjulsville, and BURIAL OF MRS. J. H. HAYES Stella Hicks of Overton, New, were married here today. ' Store Clone Out of A. Warner of New York Citv and Spanish Fork to Hereaved a brother of 1. M. Warner of the Husband. Orern ISpocUl to The Ileralil.Itepubllcan.t line, is visitinge his brother for the first time in thirty-fivSpanish Fork, April 5. Funeral seryears. vices were held yesterday afternoon at the Second ward chapel over the reI'UKsnvTEiuA.xs i.v si:ssio. of Mrs. Ruth Davis Hayes, aged American Fork. April 5. The Wom- mains 6u. who died Monday, after a lingering an's Presbyterian Alissionarv service of illness. The speakers were John Moore, the Presbytery of Salt Iake. held its J. Preston Samuel Rrockbank here annual regular meeting today at and William C'reer, A. Jones. Music was furthe church. Some fortv Presbyterian by the ward choir and by Miss members of the sciety of Salt Lke nished Moore. Mrs. Sadie Lewis and Klanche were present. The was program givThe Invocation was en bv llrs. John Meeker. Mrs W. A. by WilliamCreer. Marlnus Larson and .lex. K. II. Plack. Mrs. Crltchlow. Mrs. II. W. There were many floral Heherd. Mrs. L,. M. GilMIan. Mrs. C. R. dismissed.. Out of respect to the husMcNeU e. Mrs. C. K. Davis, Mrs. John tributes. band. Joho H. Hayes, who for many Cathcart. Jessie Lee Kills. Mrs. Ranm, years has been bookkeeper of the Mrs. Walter Kussell and Mrs. George Fork institution, Spanish K. Oavies. the local stores closed during the service. Interment was In the City cemem:w hoad cosiii:ri:o. tery. F.phralm. April o. The citizens of In a mass met 1'phraim last PARK CITY ELKS BROWSE meeting y ight to consider the Sanpete-LmerO. road proposition. Mayor II.Willardsen was elected K. Matt-:ochalrmanand Follows Installation of Offiforest upervisorfvas elected sec- Ilanquet cer for Current Terra. retary of the meeting. Mr. Calvert, government roads designer: Peter iP eiid to The halrf!nn of county commis5. At the regular Park Citv. April sioners, and Martin Isaacson, road meeting U. P. O. F.. lodge No. the of commissioner, explained what 13 re- 731 last evening Thomas Homer of quired, y Salt Lake, district deputy grand exaltThe citizens of Kphraim were asked ed made an official visit. The In donate or' $3:oo ti cash labor. Those newruler, for the term were Inofficers in charge assured that the amount stalled by Mr. Homer in u very im would be readili; raised. Rxalted namely: pressive v. manner. u. mcnaruson: ruler tFi:cHAtKKs st:itt:i away. knight. Cal K. Campbell, loyal leading knight. Uinshain. April 6. Three men. who L. R. Packer, lecturing knight. George fled in an automobile, M. were Zabriskie; 1 secretary. .lames Don; S. had knockedfrightened Raduon: trustee. Jecomthe they aftr treasurer, bination from a. safe In the mfnt mar rome. Paxton: tyler. Phillip Hales: es ket of Jerome In Rlngham quire, Uus C. Jormfon: inner guard, A. about 1.30 o'clockRourgard J. Rerry; or this While P. Ridge: T. chaplain. W.rand morning. two of the men stood guard outside C. lodge repPrisk; ganist, ti;e third worked at the safe. Lights resentative, Rober D. Wright, and alJiim nrt Hill til. ICU IXC ctlLeflllOIl ternate. W. J. Rerry. There was a of Mrs. Rourgard. who was in her home full attendance. Mr. Hoopposite. She gave the alarm and the Following thetheinstallation robbeis jumped into a machine and mer a fine members and addressed Rod. banquet was enjoyed. ni no cmiMKHci-- mhkt. HOTEL ROBBED BY CLERK Pocatcllo. Ida., April The state chamber hi commerce met atIdho with delegates from various ton tb Confesses, Theft After clubs nnd county commissions In at- PocatelloUeiiiK tendance. The board went on as favoring rural credits and a special (Special li The d 3. tax levy of mill f6r state Pocntello, April Ray Shilling, Nicollet hotel clerk, has confessed, publicity. under questioning, that he wn- guilty the Nicollet hotel early Sixty thoitdad tons of Iron ore were of i ololn-obtained from the soil of Ireland last Sunday morning. He told conflicting . yva'r. stories about tiit robbery auJ finally These are, we believe, the best articles on the home ever written for the farm woman. Mrs. Jones is by birth and experience a farm woman. She has spent years in Farmers' Institute work. She is the one woman best fitted to give helpfulpractical talks to farm housewives. Re-np- eet i Out v to-da- y Or si&bsCaeibe for a whole yea If you miss the first instalment of Wildfire because all copies here are sold out, you can gtl a reprint of the first chapters by applying to our agent n. Mor-tenxe- 1 n. 1 you will have no others. : Po-cate- Ask Your Grocer llo CroM-examlne- i!. Herald-Republica- ono-thlr- - f5 Mott Shepard, 237 S. State Street, Salt Lake City, Utah. YOU WILL BE SURE TO GET EVERY CHAPTER IF YOU SUBSCRIBE NOW Phone, Call or Write your Magazine . . Hill r; Oeorjre llerakl-Uepubllcan- , -i schoolA fifteen-year-ol- d girl devoured this story without stopping. A staid business man started it on the train and passed his station. An editor, who reads all day, sat up most of the night to finish it. And now it comes to you. Zane Grey's great story, Wildfire, starts today in m w-r- l- . . once tasted ll a 'Am--- V TABERNACLE BIDS Hit"' - JOHN DIll!SCUL. Mrs.-Mar- rr ni J It - 11 ' : & .Man Guilty of Felony. - Hrsln-Repobl:co- - COURT SHOWS ITS MERCY Only Jnll Sentence Riders of the Purple Sage V avers, mistreated him and tempted to give him poison. Impose i'fi n ! MONITOR SURVIVOR IS GRANTED FAVOR j LINCOLN PROMISEDj Avers Wife Kicked Him Out of Bed and Tried to Poison Him PORTER SAYS BANDIT ram NOW. SECRETARY 1 Plione Wasatch 1(531. MiMiift-- ami fail 2:37 S. InV- - .j-Jt I lan if 1. r i iti r, iif n; ''Tr rniV ir State St., Salt Lake City 'i HVi-- i ilMiWiMfiwTa'i-raTii'iWairvrMr- confessed. Shilling probsftjly will be groes. The bootleggers made -- their fisost niTC in thl:ciii:s. turned loose or sent to the state re- getaway under fire. A dray transAn article In the Lancet discusses formatory., lie Is 9 years old. "frost bite" from which ported the liquor to ihe sheriff's office. the many soldiers suffered while fighting, VvIllMvV IS CONFIM ATr.I). in the tvtnches In Flanders. It .is nuticn. Hi.vi;nso iiamv Pocatello, April 5. Short Line offibv swellina". pain, and disr. Gunnison. April i'uneral services turbance of cers PUKUdre and Tillman confiscated in the were held Tuesday afternoon for or death but not by the necrosis part a harrel of whisky. 48 pints thf tissues which occurs in true of whisky hkI M bottles of beer yes- Francis Karl lialversoif. infant son of of frost bin-- The names "frisrorism" and It was brought from Halt Lake Mr. and Mrs. Clarence K. Halverson. "friffldism" have been suggested terday. it. on Short Line freight 277 by five ne Burial took place in the City cemetery. The conditions causing it are cold,forwet so-call- ed char-nrteriz- senf-atio- on . n af-l'ectt- ed d, ' and interference with the circulation in the le; and foot by tight puttees and bouts. A very. thin layer of moderately between the skin and the exdry air cold water or ice enables the ternal heat of the circulating blood to keep the part free fom "f rigorism," and this can be obtained by, wearing bags of very soft, thin oilskin on the lower limbs, in conjunction with .woolen socks. Nothing tight must be worn around the leg. |