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Show PLEASANT GROVE NEWS E HUNDREDS OF PEOPLE DRIVEN FROM THEIR HOMES IN OHIO BY HIGH WATERS. Town Flooded and Much Suffering Must Ensue Unless Prompt Measures Meas-ures Are Taken to Send in Supplies. Cleveland, O Hundreds of people have been driven from their homes at Fremont and other points throughout northern Ohio by the Hoods which reached their climax Sunday night after thirty hours' rain. Damage to property will reach many- thousands of dollars. At Youngstown two of the biggest steel plants are threatened by the rising ris-ing of the Mahoning river. The Sandusky San-dusky river Is five feet beyond the danger line at Buoyrus, and an Immense Im-mense Ice gorge has formed. . "The.. most serious conditions arere- ported from Fremont, where naif the town Is under water. At Akron both the Little and Big Cuyahoga have left their banks. Many houses are (Hood ed Practically the whole of Crawford county is submerged, and It is-feared ! In remote parts famine may ensue if j prompt measures are not taken. Local -authorities throughput the whole dis- j trict are dynamiting the ice gorges j which have formed in the ryarr. TROPHIES TAKEN BY TEDDY. y. ... . 1 FLOODS AND FAMIN t Over 500 Specimens of Large mam- .,' maJs-Killed by Colonel Roose- i velt's Party. Gondokoro. Colonel Roosevelt and the others of his immediate party Bailed for Khartoum." where they expect ex-pect to arrive on March li. With their departure the African scientific expedition under the auspices of the Smithsonian institution of Washing ton was brought to a close. Colonel Uixjsevelt and his son. Hermit, Her-mit, killed some '' specimens of large mammals.- The liag included lhe follow ne: Seventeen lions eleven elephants, ten buffaloes, ten black rhinoceroses, nine white rhinoceroses, rhin-oceroses, nine n hlppMoiaml, nine giraffes, three leopards, seven chee-tas, chee-tas, three giant elands, three sables, one sltatunga and two bongos. Too Many Physicians. Chicago "The United States supports sup-ports too many physicians. While Europe maintains the proportion of one physician to every 1.500 people, the United Slates has a physician for every 58 This overproduction is due to our too numerous low grad medical schools and to the laxity of our laws governing them. It Is time that our country adopted means to relieve itself of this burden" lienty 8. Pritcliett of New York, president of the Carnegie Foundation fr the Advancement of Teaching, made thU assertion In an address before the council on medical eifucaThiu of the American Medical association Missionary Frozen to Death. Seattle. Wash Fairbanks. Alaska, rape! just received git details of he death of Martin Harris, aged 6i. t native of Tennessee, who died at hi camp among the Indians at the head of Nabesna river, after suffering freei lug of both ft In a journey from T tuana Crossing Harris, a man of edu cation and means, was rttiauimnuiK a mission among the Indians in co-r-atlon ai;d lu connection ''n Episcopate Episco-pate Bishop Kuwe He oT.taliied val nable tn'.ne 1n the Copper rlvei coun trj. fol one of whirh be atxi ' pa.it nr had Irf-en nffere.t IK.".''" The ........ .w- .M...-K..I -o him Russians Fear War With China. S Vterlnre lliivian official say China I a mm- asal:ist KtiU. and profess to U!ive that war ! !" Ibie within a decade V'ariu acalb' I the Chlnt-M has leplace.t -he -j-rta tion of a war between It i and J- pan. sht-h a f-w it.i.:b ma'.eJ . r!!'! panic amor tvie tiili;'a:i 'j'horl'l- The m "-'i and t.her ti' a t- t: ? ' b" ' ti-e predirU.1 war l!) the ,.r f-t. e is.. cwi4lr.!M anl.-is! Cfttn 11" ' '.: atteol'.on A T!e o! m.n lr n.-e-tie ti' r'ak n t-v ! iau- liovernt! en" whuti wl.i f -r -i-,an vt of Mi, h ir j L'S lf soewe-t for Mufde'g four !, rs Hat, ?.. T!-ti.i. ' a- . M Y..r.i.. m t.-r. : 4f 4 , ,r,'.'-"-i a! t.ifr-i. r.-af l.'f-. Frii is t.t to n.-,riT of UlKifi IV.fk. ,- !:, t. UM.r nl t.'il. a 1. 4 ? . " ii" r fat'-d .?; a" .f Jav 6 f -'V i-i a-i .. n-t.-'-li .. i ' ' Crft' fr sr-4 'af ' 'f I n.u i t ar i lan.r T :. I,IU4 t'4 't !!-. mf.- ""'-bo ""'-bo wa arr-4 "'fe ': . t, 4 " rtr.'f L-i c C'ta; flir:--s",-i. Vt I4 . as for ! !- pr-4 " t-C. tiu.:'.f ttt tf ' '-'- t-'.ifB- f tt jea't t lEf c (ar wtSffc-fi fsi- th fa??y. T yr o;4. ta 4k -jr r I U" froca y-'4 us ;t. stly f4 k -s T. I t- ia :n3nrwr i i Is 3 Ul of I'--,trf td ! tftUte at i'.'-at-4 "' ,... ivtr mttt f"vr. tail 'ak. BREVITY THE (Copyright, ICE CROP toh 1910 wices to RtAiN UP. ici'osT The- Ice Trust Promises to Make THIRD SLIDE HDDS TO HORROR Nineteen Deaths and Many Injured as Result of Avalanche in Idaho Mining Towns. - y Spokane.- Wash It" was learned .Monday that a third avalanche in addi- tiiui to those it STace .. ami .. Lurky. M?no .destroyed the "minins camp of - XTirbooa.e Hill Mining "company near the "S" bridge at Mullan. Idaho, about noon Sunday.-Three were killed and one body has been recovered .At Mace twelve were killed, while at least forty wcte Injured, some of whom may not recover. . Four are known to have met death at- Mace, while three were Injured . The first slide was that which wiped out almost all of the town of Mace. This catastrophe occurred at 10:45 Sunday niht,-while all the pop ulatlon except the men on the night shift In thA Standard and In the other mines In the locality were sleeping The Uurku avalanche occurred at 5:30 Monday morning. Mace Is situated on the creek bed and the mountains rise on either side of the canyon. The slopes have been well denuded or trees by the mine. The main body of the avalaueue, which started from the top of Custer mountain, passed beyond the town, and. striking the opposite slope with terrific force, rushed up the mountain side The canyon is filled up to a depth of from forty to fifty feet. So far thirty men, women and children chil-dren have been rescued rrntn lhe Mace slide, and the men are working des peratelv in an effort to succor those who may possibly be alive. At Carbondale Hill, where the third slide occurred, two are dead and half a dozen men are Injured A slide at Horsey. Ma . is reported to have caused the death of two men. and at Adair, a third man U reported to have been killed by a slide. By a sad captice of fate four of thoe who lost their live at Hurke ere members of the rescue party blch had leii Mace.' nl work at night at DOWN MEADOW VALLEY WASH. Engineers Report a Safe New Line for ' Sa, Laht R0gte. Salt l-ake City A telegram received In this city bv ex Senator Thomas Kearn from W A t'lark announces that a afe new line ha l-ei decbied upon b the euKitieer for the Sail l-ake. laiAngees and San i'edro i rai:ro.d and that 'he mute will ! down 'he Meadow Va!le wa-h Hut Itiia time 'be Sait Uue toue will be hlch and dry a' e all sMtile flinis l! will r.e.T rum h U-s ' build 'ban was at hi! thought iir, il... Lr. ,i!l aie main il.--l ' " ' br:de. b ,mI, ,il t.,,., IMaterial and a mi-.. ' . ., k m.i i.. r i,! Hl-eti !hrm!l r!l'r.'- l.-eteB I.-t,. ... n j,' I .kr ar.. 1.-Ie -olne MSI.e l ir Itlg 'lie - .1.111. I .::. t : i H , f -i in m !, . nik in a mi.1i A u. . at ! it- a.i .:-ji , .1 . i I.I? wi-. ti'.' ba-' in "'in Ha I (a t to -.. a" i. U- in l-iai i.l be ial-i d Ii mm, ti as be iro: , I - i. '. i l it Ji.Iie. ,J. Ml 1. ; i. dir. i; r a' i i I !-w !-w .-a r ndi ! 1hl or f( "- at.J w i'i Wc"ti to Ftgit De' tVri-w ! !f Jal lati.ba Itri.tow k. St. "!:Jtl hrgej is, -r r t ( u r. l. :r i t,tm d-i rale r'. tgSe. t t u w-a '.b irt a t"ra T w.tr.si n-d'-al i jdr.t B jar i(--ar ettf4 :n wi..-! 4i;-ute. ji) itc left 1rhN:e iar.Ji. fr.a'.'t ciriiarc (i ard a m I a.ai .alt t- . d ! T e ( b-i-' ? (- O d"'.d t t Teret C'---d, Hei's to Ft .m !'- Th nl f lh a': V i s a ''r IUt 1 tf I- iVtt f. .? !t . Mii. Mass . f 'tt-4 t -' MXt mr .--. a-l of ir cia-:-"a r l-4 ' a !. t-, Mr I'.a'ta?'- r-t'i' 'itiien ." ..r t. "s5i 4 lrf Iw a4 : t '5- SOUL OF WIT 1909.) 0 y&0b06FJ Reputation as a Great Comedian. RIVALS SENATOR HEYBURN DEMANDS AN INVESTIGATION OF "THIRD DEGREE" TACTICS. Objects to Alleged Methods of Officers Of-ficers in Obtaining Statements and' Confessions fromThOse Charged With Crime. INQUISITION cussed the matter at length w ith Sec-" Sec-" i retary Wilstin. and that he understood Washington If a resolution Intro- his superior officer bad given hiiif'ex- dured- on Thursday by Senator Hey burn is adopted, the senate will take up the matter of what is known among police officials as the "third degree." The resolution provides for the appointment ap-pointment of a select committee of three to investigate "the practice ot administering what, is known as 'the third degree' ordeal by officers of the law for the purpose of extorting state ments and confessions from those charged with crime." Mr Heyburn said he had read aii article in n Washington paper giving an account of the methods said to have been resorted to by the Atlantic City police to obtain a confession from William Sevier, charged wltlMhe murder of Jane Adams. He asserted such methods were more cruel than those of the Inquisition. They were not only barbarous, he said, but are in direct conflict with American institutions insti-tutions nder which an officer la prohibited pro-hibited from talking with bis prisoner on the subject of the charge against him "No one with a proper ssnss of duty would resort to such a practice In ob- iV-" i WELDON B HEYBURN. United States Senator from Idaho. j , tairnng o ..tlti.oin iu; an .tn-ud S . .... i i . . v.. ...1.1 ; ail.l no r a. . "H've. an ill ih la t mi 'ii.,ei a i; iwh-i 'o J It"! ' :.- it. a! II COM". ..ie ! i, pear i-i'.j 1 S'-natof an.e !:s n- , i II . 1- nfllr.l .. iv t I 'll 1'- itlVe' i;j!' ! H -i the - itijecl I. b. MOPES FOR BUREAU OF MiNES SniCowwi'M cf tee Sea'e Fao'b Rpxt - t-.-r 1 he . ;!).' i. . !he r,ale .--.!-:'- -rt, 1 siahca --e of and h a n; of t a S-tib rab-e i4e. tisac f the o di i H sr. a . ; n o- ' - . ' ',..- ti.vr..i i ' t" .:vl4 tJ.ls-. f 4 ' -" 1 -tAi'VU At3 er.at. S -t I 'Ah . r a a T -t -. 1 1 j-rtn!(a " .it it" .J t- mm in-j "'(! c tt ii. : i rrt ni I;-?- from 'j -" to $i j Oa's Wtf en C"3'f v . .- j 1 .. ra-.- 4 ts i , i .'riat r a;? , i; ..- : J i it K.j(eii i:it0t ; 2.!, t "- f I'th jrfcs. fi-;i sc kit t 4r,f" ?n a ;i ;-f-ari 'a '.. t -s d"rr jt- ti af-l t ' 4 b - fit I j t Ap.. y?a . fat ts4r t-- - ca i-im of OLEO DEALERS WILL SUFFER Judge Landls Sentences On Man to Six Years Imprisonment and Orders Federal Inquiry. Chicago Federal inquiry Into-methods of disposing; of oleomargarine was ordered Mondayrty Judge Mr It3vtTwenty-thfe Persons Known to Have dis of the United States district court after he had sentenced one of four dealers. Indicted for violating the oleomargarine oleo-margarine regulations, to ulx years In the federal prison at Fort Leavenworth and had fined him $15,000. The man who was sentenced to. ther penitentiary vu W. A. Broadwrell. The other three cases were continued. "It has been disclosed That probably prob-ably not less than $16,000, and possibly possi-bly more than $20,000, has been lost by the United States government as a result of Broadwell's activities," Bald Judge Landis, in sentencing the. oleomargarine oleo-margarine dealer. '"Wkenever arrested arrest-ed he has given bonds and then gone out and violated the law the next Jay. It has been a wilCiil defiance of the law. His bond has been supplied by an oleomargarine manufacturer, a proceeding which I regard as nay duty to say is highly significant." WILSON AND PINCHOT CLASH. Letter to Dolliver Not Authorized, by Secretary of Agriculture. Washington. The expected clash between GifTord Finchot and Secretary of Agriculture Wilson over the disputed dis-puted question as to whether the secretary sec-retary had given the former forester permission- to write to" Senator Dolliver Dol-liver the letter which resulted in Mr. i'luehot's dUiuUmtl, caui on Tuesday before the Halllnger I'inchot invest!-I invest!-I gating committe.e. I Mr. Pinchot declared he had dls- press permission to write lo Senator ikilliver. Secretary Wilson immediately took the stand and asserted that while he had given Mr. Pinchot permission to write to Senator Dolliver concerning "departmental affairs," he never did and never would have given him permission per-mission to write a letter criticising ',nt. Jllvl4,iPnt of the United States. . j "FINGY" CONNERS ELECTED. j . But Political Boss Yields to Will of Tammany Chieftain. Albany. X. Y William J. Conner made good his prediction that he would still be chairman of the Democratic Demo-cratic state utmmiltUe after tta meeting meet-ing Thursday. In saving his political politi-cal scalp, however, he lost most of his hair. Charles F. Murphy. Tammany chief tain, whose complete mastery of the situation was realized by no one bet ter than by Conners himself, granted the Uufialo leader a brief political reprieve re-prieve In the interest of party har mony. after Conners had agreed to resign re-sign lu April, and repudiate his recent re-cent harsh statement concerning Mr. Murphy, and the alleged auctioning of Judgebhip in New York, which, he declared, were ilie result or his info rulties of temper and were unjustified in fact. Says Wife is Perjurer. Detroit Frank M. Knott, husband of the leading witness for the defense in the Frltch trial, look Ibe witness si and on Tuesday and branded all bis wife's testimony In behalf of Fritch as false Mrs Knott, who swore that she was In the office of Or George A Fritch on AuguJ. hen the docto. Is alleged to have administered fatal treatment to Majbelle Millman of Ann Arbor, aM she w no one iherevan- swerln the decrip.i.,n"orThe d-d j girl Ihirlng Mrs Knott ietnioiiy h er husband ap,-a!rd to the Judg- ' s'op (op me case, ijef iarnis u siateiuen'a coniu!ed ierjiiry Real Fighting in Nicaragua Managua. Nicaragua - I tie .a.uaitv list of the battle between he goein meiit and In.'irreor trre at Ti.u.a and Tiptapa has mrrea.-d until il esdiiiatei) that tZ' men were kiileil ;B4 "Vl wwitlded . S-ariher have ,i,l!ie ii.n l-xlie ''"") over a f m-r. of Teta. ol the hot,.- j idt larc- terrttor. iuat sounded havina- jtUry rnmiitee The llenr) bill i-rn-diT whil alietii.iiiig to drag them ;T.,thst the demand ot B -.-. rlve tnmi the n-ld of'haitle If I j ,,,.hor!tj rf 0n !a!e-ihat of now known that Captain Godfrey Kow i ir:..iler state. a- ron.anied b a ropy l-r. id i-omniand of Geueri ham orr niai t.tp- gin. who aa .:nd . , in tri !. !eK. -.at-l ao' i'e Crwjtcs Cort c Co"erc ah.rKin I i.r: -..Vra- i n ? 'b t.A !;hi,i-!i1..ii rl?raj t I.' I --e a'e a mu t of mn,mtif ai 1 amrd th ia-i' r"Wirn"' !a a ron ri-iJel xi FH'la wr.a-r r-ra til-'-- i-a m'r a' i-.n,tit - ai- J It to 1 Th trli v rir in rf am-meed be wag-f the ! twm MWUCWel . . rm"y Vt Auorm, General Wkr .han The r.t-rtt, a wi:i rp- - S Bittfli . KM IM TS Wit WK fkwdvkorts. iKm-U -C1 R- I;? aa4 KeTO5. mvm ik s6o.v- ? tkotr oriie ir'j. ko arr1i-4 k" isa .sf - ..... -" - t.lt tt:5f It it . r ! ts wark toe rast t ka ic turote..! fa . I ---. . s-. R..aa -aaSt l---l'S a4 s'.:-' a?a -ra ). k r,!!.t''j r:4 to ,ie T wOTRaS BURIED AWFUL DISASTER AT SUMMIT OF CASCADE MOUNTAINS IN STATE OF WASHINGTON. Lost Their Lives,. Twenty-five Are Missing and a Score Injured as' Result of Avalanche. Everett, Wash.' Twenty-three persons per-sons are known to be dead, twenty-five twenty-five are missing and a score are injured in-jured as a result of the avalanche which swept down the mountain side above Wellington at the west portal of th Cascade tunnel early Tuesday morning and brushed two Great Northern, North-ern, trains, one the - westbound'-Spo-kana express and the other, an overland over-land mail train, off the narrow ledge of the high line, hurling them to the bottom of the canyon, 200 feet below. Coupled to the Spokane express was Superintendent J. H. O'Neill's private car. This was carried over the preci-pic preci-pic with the rest of the train. Three locomotives, four powerful electric motors used to haul trains through the Cascade tunnel, the depot at Wellington Wel-lington and a water tank also were carried away by the slide and buried under tons of debris. - The wrecked trains lie piled on top of each other 200 feet below the siding sid-ing upon which they stood when the avalanche swept over them. The cars were crushed Into kindling wood and no one on the train escaied Injury. In-jury. The slide filled the shelf upon which the tracks ai Wellington are laidNnd rolled over the edije Into the valley. The danger from slides is not over. Warm weather In ihe mountains Is melting the snow and frequently an avalanche Is heard thundering dowu the mountain side. Not far from the scene of the disaster a slide foil.' miles long rushed down Into the can yon Tuesday afternoon The snow is eighteen feet on ihe level and in. the canyon It Is piled up in drifts more than fifty feet deep. Mosi of the dead are believed to hnve been passengers on. the westbound west-bound Great Northern tx"pres bound from Spokane to Seattle, and which has been stalled ttt the mountain for five days. They were asluep when the slide came. The other iruin was the transcontinental fast mail, which car rled no passengers. The two trains were in charge of Conductors Farzylxsik and I'ettit, both of Everett. The fate, of the train crews is not known. Superintendent O'Neill was not in his car at the time of the slide, and escaped injury, but it is thought his private secretary. A. F-. Ijorgcoy. is dead. As sm m as word of the disaster reached Kvereit. the Great Northern divisional point. I0 miles west, a rescue res-cue train of physicians and nurses was started for the scene. This was followed fol-lowed by a second rescue train carrying carry-ing undertakers, wrecking outfits and ImImm ers STAND BY TAFT. Congress Leaders Will Oppose Amendments Amend-ments to Administration Bills. Washington After a two-hour conference con-ference with President Taft on Tuesday, Tues-day, leaders of congress announced they would oppose alt amendment to the several administration bills when It became apparent that the amendments amend-ments were offered In a spirit hostile to the main purixises of the proposed legislation. Senator Aldrich and Crane and Speaker Cannon were present This Is taken to mean 'bat sharp line would be drawn against the projii4 auww.eu ej .pu.-. and thai administration senators ' would oppose particularly the Idea 1 ......... 1. v c .. n u ii.r. fnmnoha anil n ,n (mr Republican voting .tnt lb against the bill in committee Teaan After Beef Trust's Scalp. Washington A I'll wl.uh. , m, d r the member of (hf, ..,f ,ru " t,H ,nM, liolt.te.l in j v m j, ,.., i.Hue, from J i-tt. e and j , ,h,,r , ,rad,!..0 to N-w Jef . tfial. wa in'rod.ii el j TlrM,ay hy HepVe.-tj'atlr ll. nr . "I'l !M "lu i of an lnl - or a-Ja n. na.i i Hnd!ti!ab!e Tf- t fr he a .i..rlt i. to art U Uphold Mtyer Preg'em Wahllg.I' O - Tte bue i8i!" : .n taal aSair ha i tiled Jf 'h o : "rrti-, ot two tia'!fc',j-. r (aT h!p. two Rt ntll'erw acj foir ' tubtnarSo-e Thi r-jrfi - r ial ir.rrf t' ttk r-st jar and ! , ixa-t!l! ili" mb,1 "- fr t ,mo tm5!.fi will te --bef -, m jJJ v irt utm 4if'ia'-t , '-' -t "T, , J' .'Stir. lltrtmtU fgXl WW b- S3? Th rrr aMp ;!! c at-t r II . . The f -4r .-.Mfanaew are .-"? ". the r ! I to,- sy Mr kai k 1 , -i was tula Arts! I lsvH mi ' H OA 1 iiX lU-.ll a,l Wos'J frtAt f'.m ; t rj Mt- -Two tab. r.. , tfc- fc ,-5-,-. Mr lba W t9 5 t-' ' sl " ' " ! 4 : ; ?k MU ti-r T -! a' -r U-i wet l. lie j fit .-fr' a nA '' wrwatr r- k 'i f i ciy . 1" iT"JLXLt maZ1&Lm 1 lcxa.,..iJi-ti4 lcxa.,..iJi-ti4 aa a4 "a f4t f'- m f-4.. " -wrv r Sis r.ii ti t rt''i c--4 y-!1 t ir"t.it -.-l Tv lai - ' r ".' t .r THE UTAH BUDGET The town of Wellsvflle is to have a bank with a capital of 20,000. Ex-Governor Arthur L. Thomas has teen re-appointed postmaster at Salt Lake City for his fourth term. At the old folks' celebration at Draper on Friday, 'more than' 400 persons per-sons over the age of 40 were present Antonio Yoconenti, a laborer for the Denver & Rio Grande railroad at Ool-ton, Ool-ton, -was run over and instantly killed by a freight train IL , '. Mrs. Katherine K. Hatch, a pioneei resident of this state and also ot sev- feral other states in the west, died al Logan, February 25, at the age of 74 years. . ; : : 11. . A white man caught in an opium den in Park City when a jaid was made by the police, put up tie plea that he was teaching the Chinamen how to read. Weber oounty fruit growers propose to inaugurate a system of packing now in use in the California and Grand Junction regions, which is said to bring much higher prices for the fruit The Wasatch canning factory of Og-den Og-den was totally destroyed by fire Sunday Sun-day morning, entailing a loss of $75,-000, $75,-000, mostly covered by insurance. The fire Is supposed to have resulted from defective wiring. . After lingering for almost a week with his throat cut from ear to ear, -J. W. Walker, the young man who at tempted suicide with a pocket knife, died at the Ogden general hospital Sunday morning Sanpete county is forging ahead In dairy products. There are today eight creameries In operation, whose output aggregates approximately 500,-(ino 500,-(ino pounds of butter annually. "This industry Is yet In Its -infancy. The Tooele authorises are looking for a stranger who gave his name as Huberts, who is wanted for- cashing liogiia checks on several -business firms and on the Tooele Commercial bank to the amount of $200. IaSanpee county sheep raising and wool growing is extensively engaged In. In the production of wool and mut-ton mut-ton this county leads, not only in Utah, but the entire United States, no other county having so many sheep. Thomas I!udd!eston, driver of a passenger pas-senger motor train on the Ohio Copper conipanv's property at 1-ark. about six miles from Rlngham. iost his right leg as the result of a collision between be-tween a passenger and an ore train. The body of Cleveland Coombs, a 17 year-old Salt Ike boy. has been found In the mountains near Salt Ike City, the lad having shot himself him-self through the heart. Despondency over lack of employment led to the tragedy. Sheriff Jtidd of Ttah county It having hav-ing the body of Gerhard Siebel. the man who froze to death In Spanish Fork canyon, embalmed. It is said Siebel Is a member of a wealthy German Ger-man family, and formerly an officer In the German army. The news comes from Fa. row an that several cases of Illegal liquor selling has been found and the guilty persons punished In fact. It Is reported thai the punishment was so sever that at least one of the offenders decided to", shake the dust of Parowan from his feet. Utah's fruit crop for 1919 will bs marketed through the Utah Fruit sx change. organUed last year, and all of the crop sold In carload lots by nine of the eleven fruitgrowers' association asso-ciation In the state will be marketed through the Honeer Fruit company of California While trylnx t" climb throoeh freight train In the n. 8 U yards In Salt iJike City, wr'i-im DunMer. aed 63 years, emplo-ed by the city a laborer, raugtit hi right arm between the bum tiers and so severely Jammed It that llm member had to be amputate! ampu-tate! at the shoulder The council of Ss't 1-ake has permitted per-mitted the peddl'ng of farm producla recently to ronumrr of that city by the growers and In tht way II In believed be-lieved the cot of living will bav so.n been reduced to considerable X-tnt. X-tnt. Heretofore peddlers without licetide hUd been barrd FA I. Ko.p. ifce siprr'.r.tendetit of i t-P (aa! W. !o.I fig stltloa at Farfc CTfi hid M left !eg broken Just .ne - n-ikle Wlil! moving truck toa-f f tiniT r rr of tb tltn l-er fe!l aed rtk Vr KffP l'f Vio 1Y int'r l-r-ailn the leg an t a b"it-rtt h! it 'I arm Tts Cat-he C. ml fV'ti'try arria t -n h-id -id ar, sua' ehitlt at t eca la' k ard w '! patrr b H !:S a giad d.J of Nrr! A'th'i'iiT'l 'Vff er tl te maoT f a r ih '3a!"y Is ruse! letter - I tale ca fca 1B ta i !a - ; r tra'--t nt th brJ. -..-irl fat vy will - b n -nd ts ftri-! Vr-i-8try U hHsss !,- ."! If WiAt'afta. of e at t, wT! r--iw wfhia a few w r TS Kfwl .! ai t e rwi; wi n w rv-Ii o Fa.. I,jal Ct'f. iS-rrsJ rr Iki ca al kr -a ef terrlV t?rC ! ' W' F-a I lk CVy - t rr t !.; ! tW sw4 a's f,fwi t ri--r rr rtat " itrf rt '! ? S't -- nw-sr'y. a-t ar srtfit'i l' prtr-s, diwrtrterM lt tret ac.5 j v- 't4 tae etdr-ta. , t yf r" -. t--' f -i a it.d k ! I , a . I sa 8 a-l t fk ti 4-i |