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Show JOURNAL, JODVALil. UTAR TI()NALS !$AGUE I 1 FLAG IN I ONSHIP STRUGGLE ... ..••...:o•..... 1 1 1i!!li!ll$i!!li!!li!!liil~ffi!ii!!ffilliifiilfiilfiilfiilfiilfiilfiilfiil.mffi!! steps toward a Ogden.-l~portant contract between the United States reclamatlol!, service and the Weber River Water Users' associttlon for the constr~on of the Ec 10 dam, first unit of. the Salt Lake basin project were ~en when three canal companies Olended their articles of incorporatiota. so as to meet legal requirements. .. I / · I ! I Salt Lake City.-Mileage allowed for private .Utomobiles In state ser- I vice will be changed on September 30 from the tchedule which has been 1 in use for the past three years which 1 will mean a ~rge saving to the state 1 if the board of examiners approves ' the schedule, which was transmitted to it by the department of finance and I purchase. The schedule places all automobiles into three classes. , I Price.-The jury In the case of M. Kurauma, who was on trial for the • murder' of Y. Ishdaka on March 1 at 1 Helper, which was given the case, re· 1 ported their Inability to agree, the I jury standing elevlm f<>J conviction to one for acquittal. The jury was discharged. Kurau~a will be retried 1 it is believed at the present term of , court. . ' Ogden.-That th".l Utah qtate herd of Holsteins, on exhibition for the first time at Blackfoot, Idaho, was the outstanding exhibit in the Holstein division, is the statement of C. S. Potter, president of the Utah Boll stein Breeders' a ssociation, and Jesse ' S. Richards, secretary of the Ogden chamber of commerce, who just return.ed after attending the eastern Idaho dis trict fair in that city. Salt Lake Clty.-Willlam Magee, 18 j j year old jockey, was almost instantly killed at the fair grounds race track when the horse upon which he was riding bolted Into the fence circling the outside of the track, throwing l\is rider headon into the boards and posts, crushing his skull and breaking his• neck. The youngster, whose home was in South Edmonton, Alberta Canada, was brought here recently , by Charles Emmert for the purpose of 1riding the horses which compose the I Mrs. C. Emmert stable. At Vancou· ver he is said to have been the lead· 1 lng rider until he left for the Win- I nipeg meeting, whence he came to Salt Lake with the Emmert string. 1 f Myton.-Charles ·wale, a farmer, residing five miles west of Myton, was severely burned while trying to enter his home and save valuable papers, after the building had been set on fire by a bolt of lightning. I j , ; Delta.-Mrs. Ludwig Jorgensen is preparing to erect a restaurant. garage and hotel at Marjum pass on the Grand Central highway, fifty miles west of Delta, where tourists can find ~cellent accomodations. Price.-Two-thirds of tho cement work as been completed in the outtunnel for the rock·flll dam which Is soon to be constructed near Scofield in the Price fl.iver Water Irrigation district. This tunnel, driven 1 through the rock formation on the • south side of the proposed damsite, I will be lined to a depth of eight in! ches throughout ·l~s length. The com-~ , pletion of this work In three weeks ·~ time will find directors of the district making an inspection before the wat, er Is turned into the tunnel. They 1 have been Informed that the valve gates for use in the tunnel are now en route. When installed they will have a discharge capacity of about : 500 second feet under 50 feet head, 1 . and will be operated by means of a mecbani11m set in the gate shaft Jm· : mediately above the gates, and at a • point two-thirds down the length of ' the tunnel. jtet J I I I I 1 ' I I l· i Salt Lake Clty.-Frank Roberts, I about 65 years of age, night watchman for the Purity Biscuit company, past six years, was fatally Injured when he was crushed by the I carriage of the freight elevator on the second floor of the plant. He was . I found caught between the second floor and the ftoor ofthe elevator by I Arthur Mitchell, foreman of the biB· cult company. ! for the I I Salt Lake City.-Ralph W. Seyboldt will face the firing squad at the state prison October 23 to pay the penalty for the murder of Patrolman David H. Crowther on October 12, 11923. This iS' the fourth time an ex, ecution date has been fixed for Seyboldt since his conviction on a charge · of first degree murder the April following the commtssJOn of the crime. The pronouncement was made by Judge M. L. Ritchie of the Third district court. / Salt Lake City.-J. L. Strathorn, engineer and soils Investigation expert j of the buroau of soils, United States 1 department of, agrlcuhure, and W. G. Harper, also an engineer In the same service bave arrived in Salt Lake and will begin a soil survey and analysis of the area lying between this city and the Great Salt Lake. Their report wlll have a great importance in the final decision o~ the Unite4 States bureau of reclamation with re-I 1 ference to what is known aa the Tayjloravllle and terminal unit of th• Great Salt Lake -basin project. I 1 I I .. ... ..:co:.w-'-o:o News Notes /PITTSBURGH PIRATES WIN CHAMPIONSHIP OF THE It'• a Pri11ilege to Live in I NATIONAL BASEBALL LEAGUE FOR EASON 1925 o•~'!A,." .a." 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