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Show THE JORDAN JOURNAL. MIDVALE, UTAH on Strike Oper aton and Mine n "Typographical Terrace" Is Fonn ally Opened '······ ······· ······· ······ New s Not es I... I It'• a Privilell•- to Live in Uta h ••••••••••••••••••• ••••••• Salt Lake City.-The Utah Water I Storage Commissio n has a report from i W. M. Green, engineer for the feder- a! bureau of reclamatio n, telling of I progress in tests made along the Pro1 vo river near Deer Creek for a dam : for storage reservoir contempla ted I there In connection with the Great i Salt Lake basin project. l I ·> Salt Lake City.-Plu nging through I a skylight in the attic of the John rr. ! Park building of the University of I Utah, to a concrete f!talrwfly sixteen : feet below, Adolph \Vullstein, 22, , prominent student and athletf~ of the ~ university met his death Friday. 1 .,. 1 ! Phoenix, Ariz.-Sal t Lake City, I Utah, was unanimou sly selected a~ the 1927 convention of the American National Livestock associatio n at the the : close of the present (;onventio n at Members of the joint committee of mlners and operators discussing suggested plans tor ending Phoenix, Arizona. strike, at their meeting in New York. Left to right: Thomas 'l'homas of Wilkesbar re, Pa.; A. M. Fine Inglls, Salt Lake City:-sal t Lake anti o1 Scranton, Pa. ; E. H. Suember of Frackvllle , Pa.; George Hadesty of Pottsvllle, Pa. ; Maj. Wllllam north central Utah cities experother and J. G. WArroner of Lansford, Pa. ' lenced their coldest night of the win1 ter as the result of a blanket of snow I the first of the year, which felt 1 throughou t the day. 'l.'he mercury 1 went down to 18 degrees above zero ., in Salt Lake and to 9 degrees above In Ogden. The coldest day in Salt . Lake previous this winter was 21 de1' grees above on January 5th. , 1 Myto~.-The Ui~tah Seed Growers dssoc!atlO n plant fmished cleaning Its alfalfa seed crop, which had been In storage, recently. Most ~ the men were laid off, only enough to take care of the shipments being retained. During the season the plant handled 1,900,000 pounds of seed. It had on hand last Friday noon 3949 sacks, or 651,000 pounds of clean seed. This Is yet to· be sold by the growers. " 1 1 I I Moslems Cling to Customs, Even in Berlin 1 l I 1 "Typograp hical 'l.'enace," ne"' headquart ers of tile Internatio nal 'l.'ypograp hical union, Indianapol is, formerly tlla the home of the late Samuel T. Murdock, was thrown open to friends of the organizati on at a reception building the shows other day. Trade union leaders and publishers from many cities attended. The illustratio n and Presl{!ent .Tames J,. Lynch with some of his fair guests. Electric Seapl ane Successfully Tested in Engla nd I Myton.-A movement has been inaugurated in several of the towns of Uintah basin sponsored by the com· mercia! clubs and business organiza1 tions asking the governme nt to give J to all of the towns daily mall service from Price to Vernal. Such a movement meets with the aproval of the citizens of Myton, Roosevelt, Fort of Duchesne and Vernal. Duchesne, the Although they may be far away from their colorful East, Moslems do not forsake the picturesqu e customs of Berlin, county seat of Duchesne county, altheir rellglon. The above photograp h shows a group of Moslems who are residents of the modern city ready has dally service. Germany, saying their prayers 1n the manner that has been the custom for centuries. Salt Lake City.-The state auditor forwarded to Ogden city school has MARY GOES HUNTIN G district warrant for $163,098 and to Weber county school district one for $56,78'4, or a total of $219,882 for state aid to schools alone. So far Weber county has contribute d to all the state and state school funds only $150,000 received last December . When Cold Wave Hit Atlan tic Coast has Above Is pictured the new electric seaplane, fitted with two 450-horse- power Napier Lion motors, which metal. of made Is boat flying this of lust completed a satisfactor y test flight around Great Britain. The hull Solving Osage Murder Mysteries I GOLD ROSE FOR QUEEN I il Ogden.-M artin P. Brown, president of the Weber County Farm Bu• reau, at the annual meeting in Riverdale advised growers of canning crops not to sign with canners until the f bureau committee has negotiated for I prices· for 1926 crops. He said there Is still a prospect that canners will curtail production in 1926 because of the heavy pack In 1925, and thus co· I operation of the growers is essential ' for self-protec tion. Salt Lake City.-The first snowfall of the year was received In Salt Lake and vicinity with a general white covering all over the state. This will help the stock which have been want· ing snow for some time. Salt Lake City.-Lac k of snow in the state continues to claim attention of the weekly weather and agricultur al survey of the Salt Lake office of the United States weather bureau. The bureau's report shows roads all over the state in good condition "but dusty." Cattle on domestic pastures i are good, but sheep only fair, as winJohn Burkhart, Ernest that are Okla., City, Oklahoma from Reports ter ranges in proximity to moisture Ramsey and Bert Lawson have made confession s that will clear up the i are becoming poor, according to re- mystery of the murders, In the past two years, ot 17 persons In the Osage ports. One thousand head of yearlnlg country, home of the richest Indian tribe. W. K. Hale, wealthy ranchman cattle have been shipped to Califor- 11nd uncle of Burkhart, has been arrested and indicted. The illustratio n nia ranges from the Price district, it shows the ruins of the E. W. Smith house at Fairfax, which was dynamited Is said. with the death ot three persons, and, Inset, a portrait of Hale, who Lawson The pope, on the occasion of tha says hired him· to blow up the residence. Washlngt on.-The mines of Utah in twenty-fif th anniversar y of the marriage of the Belgian rulers, King AI· 1925 produced gold, silver, copper, bert and Queen Ellz~Jbeth, presented lead and zinc valued at $82,763,000, an Queen Elizabeth with the golden rosa Increase of nearly $16,000,000 over the output of 1924, according to estimates 1 shown ln the photograp h, i by V. C. Heikes of the bureau of The . CLAIMS VAST RICHES commerce of t departmen mines, exceeded lead and output of silver that of ·any year since the mines were discovered , and the output of zinc and gold was decidedly larger than that of 1924, ~ - I I I Cupid-shy Mary Landon Baker Ol Chicago, wb,o jilted Allister McCormick and who 1s reported to be en! gaged to Capt. Ralph Peto, British army omcer, ls going to India and Atrl.ca to hunt big game. Mlal Baker at present 1s in Europe, That the cold ~ bad arrived on the Atlantic coast . . , evidenced by tbe appearall(l 8 of tbe"'f;eam trawler Surf as she ft:aehed her pier at South BMton after a lCl'UIIrle with the wlntr)' blasts. NEW WALL ST. BISHOP Police Searching Suspects • . Landmark of Capital Is Tom Down Provo.-T hat there should be provided in this state a more suitable institution for the care and treatment of the feeble-min ded than that afforded at the State Mental hospital was the expression of Governor George H. Dern at a meeting of the state board of insanity held at the institution . Salt Lake City.-Clo se onto half a hundred track aspirants" answered the indoor track call at the L. D. S. High school. The Saint athletes wlll re· port dally to Wid Ai.ihton for the preliminary training. 1 I Rev. Edwin A. Corbett is the new "Bishop of Wall Street," succeeding the late Rev. Wllllam W!lklDaon, who tor 2ti years preached at noon at Broad and Wall streets. Mr. Corbett on the 1treet and woa a kind of usiatant to Mr. wn. Municipal poUce of CantOD, CJllna, atopplq napeeta Jdn8on for U rean. U.. for weapons. I :•arctw ) Salt Lake City.-A railroad consolidation, probably greater than any that the country has ever known and In which Colorado and Utah would be vitally interested , is rumored in Den· ver. This invdlves the absorption of the Rock Island System and the Moffat railroad by the Southern Pacific line from Ogden, Utah, t9 Craig, Col· orado, and from Denver to Limon, it is said, Such a Consolida tion and constructi on program, it Is reported, would give the Southern Pacific two tranacontl nental line• ' Mrs. Ellen Peck, wbo wa11 once called the "Queen of Conftdeqc~ clue of the real landmarks of. Washingt on-tile old Capitol hotel, on Women," now living at Nyack, N. Y. 1 , a stone'• throw of the capitol-h i being announces her intention of clalllllnJ , Pennsyl\'a nia avenue and within filling station. The sole survlvlni a $4,000,000 platinum llllne of wb1~ gasoline a tor room , demolishe d to make capital, an old auction block, 1.1 she 1s sald to ~ tha llelre8l. Sht II national the in day1 of slave market i relic ' 914DIQeq-be hotel. the of north jUllt I I rem |