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Show THE HERALD-REPUBLICA- SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 191G N, J Tin: SM.T l.KU of ierman thought have not, after all, a Frankenstein created that may crush HERALD-REPUBLICAN them. The bVniian people seennncly were prepared for a jwiliey of fright fulness. They Tfc ln II rpti bllc faileil to understand the wave of horror (Cat. Feb. 12. 1D0.) the murder of women and children would ThF n!t Lake Herald Jun ;. is7o.) set in motion, but their government underi:t. to MAIN STHKHT. stood ami was determined to risk no more f it. Anil now that government dare not Published by Tf. company H. 1. Itooth, president; disavow what it took steps to insure should -A. I. Thomas., vice president; Howard berepeated. Jenkins, treasurer. AI'ph Ander.'on, secretary. "The t Is ii tr that we are in love with Grnrral Miaacrr. I. If.Arthne Cttitr. m. II rot flilltnr. J. efficiency." President YVll?on. It look, then, as though efficiency had a pooj case of breach of promise. Associated, with Tiin audit bureau circulations. Information concerning circulation "will PREPARING FOR THE STORM b this association, trousrh '45ptlrt1 . TXTKASriiKS introduced in House and Venetian nulMlag. Chfca-ioSenate by administration spokesmen as Salt in of the President's recent expressions Only Republican dally nennpaptr Lake City. Utah. conversion to the tariff commission idea DAILY A.VD SUNDAY, delivered by carrier in Fait Lake City, one week. 15 cents; Sun-la- y disclose the administration is seekimr merely to evade public disapproval without in only, a cents. One mall DAILY AND SUNDAY. by any way satisfying public demand. month. 7 S rent; one year, J.00. Senator Lewis' plan for a commission SUNDAY by mail (In ndranct) One year, shrill have power to increase or dewhich i:.o. SF.MIWEEKLY by mall (In advance) Six crease tariffs as the exigencies of a jriven month. 75 cent; no year. 11.5'). situation may require is only the same old Democrat ie economic fallacy in a new ren herald-republicanot Tin: It is not protection though it presponsibly for nny unsolicited, manuscript which is not ptHnly marked with the name tends to be. It woti!d enable a Democratic-controlle- d and cldre. of the. sender and accompanied to board maintain hih tariffs stamps for return. during the forthcoming political campaign to protect the administration from the criticism it imrst fears and to lower them after election day when the subterfnere has s. served ri'imiAiiv its purpose. ioi. Tii:iMi, No adult capable of connected thought 1 1ST DARKEST IMEW YORK need be deceived by Democratic promises t hiMrt-t wallow that the commission would be nonpartisan. compelled Eighteen tn a, inch The country ha- - had three years of Demofilthy sty tugether t n a Mnsr'e other. rifctny grimy cratic noupartisanship, the sort of f? d with roller thrs ffiuji frm palls that expressed itself in the . as thouch It wti' th and licnlnl In Federal Reserve boanK that appointed the JillTiy dormitories with vermin Iti their hair. trade commission, that is placing Louis D. ahove is t:t a description ,,I the sad Ilrandeis on the Supreme bench, that has TJIK of the t hil Ireri of lielgimn under served as. a cover for raids on the civil drend-fu- l the oppressive government of service, that has compelled national banks t Lf? to loan It is not a recital of (tprmain. government kinds to dubious finanwhoso of the Serbian children wi"s country cial enterprises in which the friends of a t; overrun by thnr terrible Austrian?. It cabinet officer might be interested. is not a narration of conditions in Darkest Protection is the need of the country Africa taken from tho bfk of a !iorrifieI now. It will be more the need when the war is ended. Protection alone will do and explorer. The barbarous uncivilized country which no counterfeit, pretense or mockery will he permits hapless children to be treated as accepted as a substitute. And it will be detailed above i the .state of New York, restored hv its friends. I". S. A. The narrator is not a sensational veflow journalist. ' lie is no lss truthful POLITICS IN USUAL ROLE a personage than William .1. Doherty, P.AXDOXMF.XT of the continental The A1 army deputy commissioner of charities. and the substitution there damnable condition-- ; which he describes for of a project for "an increased standing under oath were found in tuo charitahle army and plan an enlargement of the national institution that regularly receive ail from guard" will surprise few when the decision the state, and the city, of Xew York. is finally made. Political pressure bedevils Xew York apparently contains someevery other governmental question and it thing rnore than tango parlors, skating was too much to hope even the great narink;, Iorrtr palaces, bucket ihi'pN and tional need of preparedness would be exYall street. All thee evidences of an inempt from its influence. tense, cultured and refined civilisation Secretary Garrison doubtless expected seemingly are hut the glitter nnd tinsel that some such denouement from the beginning. are de- He is conceal festering pores such sufficiently the politician to underXew York press stand tho scribed above. Yrt the motives that sway the lawmaking has the unparalleled audacity to raise body and sufficiently the efficient officer Pharasairal hand in lolv horror at th; to recommend what he believes should be atrocities in Belgium, in Serbia, in Poland done, irrespective of politics. The. national and in Gal'ieia ! guard organizations consider the continental to th- - Evening army proposal as shouldering them out in-of A PMtadelphlan write of hU city that upon ht. report to the field and they have the political Idrcr t police of a robbery h was Adi""l "a fluence to make their resentment effective. n right Whatever of hope themeans country might defective will be put on tfi He. to resist inthin'what that that ni had have happened, away." improved h heard ro m"r of th thieves or th loot. vasion would result from the agitation may a well be discarded. A standing army of HENRY TO TRY ONCE MORE professional soldiery large enough to be of Ford's real use will never be tolerated by the EVKfJYIiODY will accept Henry "the people neros the American people. The national guard orvater were astonished when they saw the ganizations can never become an efficient personnel" of the peace1 party and "vtouM reserve so long as they are called upon to hardly believe me when tdd tl.ern I could do commonwealth police duty. A trained have brought tbou.sa:td- rnore of th.o same." reserve being the common sense solution of Noljodv here believe-- stich a statement, the question, the nation can but turn hopeeither. fully to the navy as its ole rock of deHappily. Amerieans of tle type Henry fense unless some congressional genius sugto k to Kurope are rare. Tl.ey are even gests scrapping the present equipment and n:ore rare than the quirrds that xrere depending, in time of trial, upon coastwise snutrIed aboard the Oscar II tearr.er and ihe wlialebacks of the (treat by some mad vvn uho thotslit them en- Lakes. tirely appropriate. There is only one Rev. Charles F. Aked. who. the saints be praised, ANOTHER LIGHTNING CHANGE t an Fnclishman arid more than one .Tndire should be clearly understood that IT i too one be would It justmany. President Wilson's reason for playing I.tndey a tribute to Henry's fine discernment that Pocahontas to the sugar industry's John no rolleall i necesnry. Th.ev were all Smith is quite different from that which alike. actuated Powhatan's daughter. The PresiIlenrv snvs he perfectly satisfied dent's young political affections have not nith the result of the ir$p" and since been won by sugar. He stays the ax beHenry paid the expenses nobody else should cause his administration needs the money. cr mptain. His satisfaction affords an in Revenue ami not protection is the purof characteristics the into teresting insight pose of retaining the existing duty on sugar. the man who brought 'be troubles of the! There is not to be free trade in sugar berich within the renr!i of the poor. Had he cause the existing direct taxes are burdenbeen as content with his earlier mechanical some, more are threatened, and the sugar failures, he would have remained plain industry provides a method of placing a Henry Ford whom the madness of ti much . share of the burden of government upon r.toney would never haveI convinced in-a- ' the foreign producer. The "poor man's knowledge of mechanics an. percentage breakfast table" is no longer the object of eluded a No a knowledge of statecraft. tender solicitude on the part or the DemocThat party is so busy pitying itself "the itracy.lacks leisure Vice President Marshall declare to weep over others' risht I ) license and to regulate does not em- n t rrii lilies brace the riirhl to prohibit." He v,f speak-iThere may be some definite item of na-- j r. however, of the Income t x and not the tional oolicv. or some tangible principle of! traffic. government, concerning which the President has not changed his mind since he began A MODERN FRANKENSTEIN the prime puzzles of the war is dealing with facts instead of, theories, but OXH ofutter impossibility of reconciling; we cannot call any to mind. If it were posGerman of ficial statements with thos, that sible to possess a positive genius for being orne from unofficial. bit apparently wrong, we should consider the President has authentic, sources. (Jet many "s disclosure that fatal gift. His capacity for lightning that orders to sink r.o more liners without change would make his fortune on the warning was issued to submarine com- vaudeville stage. manders immediately following the Lusi-tanLABELING THE JACKASS outrage conflicts violently with the icportcd rejoicing throughout the empire IT is distinctly to the credit of the police that followed that wholesale erime. that they gravely give every possible aid The world heard that the Ltjsitania at- to the rural visitor who ruefully informs tack was hailed by the Herman people a them lie consorted with scarlet women, and his coma signal triumph of (lennan prowess nt sea. drank himself into It heard that Uernnm school children were panions into watchful cupidity, handed his tiveo a half holiday to celebrate the event purse containing $30 to one of them, bidproperty. It heard that the commander of ding her "go and get some more beer," then the submersible which committed the mur- confidently awaited the change that never der was decorated by the emterr. It heard came. The women, of course, have committed that (Jerrr.an editor- sneered at the be nightcd neutral who were unable to fathom a crime and should be punished. Hut public opinion would promptly extlie psychology of a nation that not only endured but actually applauded so mon- culpate the authorities if they paraded the chastened anil disillusioned reveller through strous a deed. mental of studv in phethe the streets bearing a placard reciting preHxpert icrolwhether been nomena have cisely the kind of a jackass he is. wondering er SALT LAKE IN BRIEF Inlrr-Monnln- Herald-Rcpubllca- rub-tl'htn- jr n rt 1 i 1 -- dis-v;:!i- 1 1 tvl. il-e- ;. lep-ndn- non-partisans- z-- the - I - sur-reptitieni- sly - j ia semi-stup- - or e. e LOCAL WEATHER FORECAST AIR weather for today and tomorrow was the prediction made last night by the weather bureau. A drop in temperature is. scheduled for tomorrow. Kiosk readings: 6 a. m., 40; noon, oO; b p. m.. 4 1; midnight. 39. CITY BREVITIES. Comparative weather data at Salt Lake for February 7: TEMPERATURE. Degrees. MIm Klnje nt Hospital. Miss Marietta S3 was Highest King of the Keith apartments Is dangerously Highest tn this month since 1874 was 68 ill at Holy Cross hoepltal. 39 Lowest morning was was Lowest Monday 13 VIIoiTed I'mtrn Clerk. Authority this month tdnce 1S74 was... . . . 46 Mean temperature was given by the county commission to Charles A. Weaver, county auditor, to employ an ad31 Normal was ditional clerk In his office temporarily to Per cent. 67 straighten out the flies which were disar- Relative humidity at 6 a. m. was.. S ranged In moving from the basement to the Relative humidity at 6 p. m. was. . . second floor. PRECIPITATION. Inches. for the 24 hours endingat 6 y. m. Homrr'n Salary Paid. The warrant for Total 00 was Thomas Homer's January salary, which was Total for this month to date is . 30 audiheld up by Charles A. Weaver, county since January 1 to precipitation tor, because the county clerk was late In re- Total Is date 2,26 was treasurer, mitting histofees to the county Sun rises 7.31 p. m., sun sets 5.54 p. m released th clerk, Mr. Horner having February 8, 1916. turned over his fees to the treasurer. Ankrd to fiend Delegate. Mayor W. Mont COURT CALENDAR Fecry received a request from Mayor Joseph O. Armstrong of Pittsburgh asking that he name three delegates from Salt Lake to tlie Jl lir.K M. I.. TUTCIIIR. N. V. Mells against E. G. Sklirls, $1500 congress of American road builders to be 3. held in Pittsburgh February 28 to March breach of promise contract. On trial. So action ha been taken by the 'mayor. .11 DCd T. D. LKAVIS. Want ItnnuM Improved. Four petitions the of Mrs. Cairns against the San Pedro, various In roads that portions Emily asking tie surfaced with silica were submit- Los Angeles & Salt Lake Railroad company, county ted to the county commission and will be $20,000 damages, death of husband. On trial. considered later. The Improvements asked are Redwood road from Twelfth to Four-to J I'Dfi K (J. fJ. AHMSTHOMi. teenth South. West Temple from Twelfth Winnifred Callahan against the Denver Fourteenth South. Eighth West from Tenth & Rio Grande Railroad company, $50,000 to Twelfth South, and Twelfth South from damages, death of husband. On trial. Third East to the Jordan river. was c. LooFnoniow. To Arrntiue Unn. AuthorityC. Nay-lojenra? W. W. Sagers against the International given the county treasurer, Raymond by the county commission to make ar- Smelting, company, $41,127 damages from fumes. On trial. rangements with the Continentalon National its cerband to loan the county money tificates of indebtedness at 5 per cent interDGK C. W. MOHSI-- . JI the board the told county est. Mr. Naylor State against C. L. Lundberg, violation dees not need funds at present, but he would of liquor laws. Fined $15 or fifteen days in like to have authority to arcange for obtain- Jail. ing money without delay when needed. llirth of Son. A son was born last nichtd THE DEATH ROLL to Mr. nnd Mrs. Will II. Folland. Mr. Is assistant city attorney. LOCAL. Tenth District ItepiibUean. The Republicans of the Tenth district will meet tonight HOI1ERT KEYSOn. at 10 Stanley place at S o'clock, to elect a for Robert Keysor, 11 Funeral services chairman. years of age, who died yesterday at a local Duty on Glove'. Duty amounting to hospital, will be held in the Second ward J107.33 was paid Into the Salt Lake customs chapel at Murray at 1 o'clock tomrorow. office on a shipment of gloves from Paris Interment will be in Murray cemetery. Mr. consigned to the Paris Millinery company. Keysor is survived by a widow and mother, in addition to three sisters, four brothers The rate of duty was $2 per dozen pairs. and five stepdaughters. J. Meeting nt Illff Church. Evangelist comwill ).. William Terry of Cleveland, K. SMITH. mence a series of revival meetings In Iliff .1. E. Smith, 617 Sixth avenue, a driver for M. E. church, corner of Ninth East and First the Meyers Cleaning company, died yesterSouth, this evening. An Invitation is ex- day at a local hospital following a brief Illtended to all. ness. Mr. Smith, who was a native of IlliLecture on Lincoln. At the new Rich- nois, had made his home in Salt lake for ards chapel tills evening at the joint session some time. He is survived by his widow of the Mutual Improvement associations, and two small children. His father at BurDaniel Harrington will speak on the sub- lington, la., also survives him. "Some Lessons In the Life of Lincoln." ject Musical and other exercises will also be STATE given. Complete Audit nt Ogtlen. George T. C. S. ANDERSON, I1RIGIIAM CITV. Judd. deputy state auditor, has returned to the of audit his Salt Lake after completing Brigham City, Feb. 7. C. S. Anderson died books1 of the State Industrial school and the here today at the age of 71 years. The principal cause of death was his inability State School for Deaf ami RUnd at Ogden. to take nourishment In any form, and Ano Appointment Made. The juvenile com starved to death, ile practically mission meeting to elect a successor to the derson was in Denmark 1M5, and born January in3, 1S55. late Judge Alexander McMaster was not held come to Utah with his parents of the absence from the mother died in Missouri, after which His yesterday eeaus the will city of Dr. E. O. Oowans. It probably came to Utah. Of eight children three family be held today. Petitions for the appoint- survive, Mrs. Mary Olsen, Levi Anderson and ment of Miss Margaret Council were filed W. Ij. Anderson, all of Brigham. Funeral office, at the governor's services will be held Wednesday in the Third i ward chapel. Will llsehange Places A. A. Justice, observer of the Salt Lake weather bureau ofFOREIGN. fice, who has been assigned to the station at Wagon Wheel Gap, Colo., will leave FebA. Blair, ruary 14 for that point.' Thomas V. DHLItOTTH. ;i:.. NICHOLAS who will come from there to relieve him, 7. Gen. Victor Del- Nicholas Feb. Mr. on of Paris. the arrival will leave Immediately motte has died of illness contracted at tne Justice. refront. He was one of the heroes of thecomHamilKlghty Year Youngs Mrs. Mary Mormon from Charleroi, during which he treat ton, who became a member of the manded the rear brigade of the French church In Scotland, was given a birthday Seventeenth armyguard corps. party at the home of J. W. Wilson, 937 W. North Temple, In honor of the eightieth anHICLHEX DARIO. niversary of her birth. She isa a native of Feb. 7. Reuben Dario, of resident nnd Leon, been Nicaragua, has Scotland, Paisley, and author diplomat, died here last night. Salt Lake since 1SS4. Son Horn Yesterday. Mr. and Mrs. N. OF KINXOt'I.L. i:lll, Lamont Wilson of 50 W. North Temple are S Feb. (2.05 a. m.) Archibald London, 3 a o'clock yesat born son, of the parents l, twelfth Earl of George' Hay, Fitzroy I S. D. Mrs. at hospital. terday morning was Hove. He at born died yesterday Wilson and son were reported to be doing In 1S55 and served with the staff of Baker excellently last night.' Mr. Wilson, city edwas the re- Pasha in Egypt. itor of The cipient of congratulations yesterday. n plains Itabies Treatment. The Pasteur CONGRESSIONAL SUMMARY treatment of rabies was explained by Dr. E. R. McClure of the United States bureau of SENATE. animal Industry In his talk to the Federal noon. at Met club. He said Commercial at the club Field Military committee continued hearings on the morthat when the treatment is given of 1 preparedness. tality of the disease is only one-haCalifornia oil men resumed appeal for reper cent, whereas without the treatment lief before public lands committee. nearly all cases are fatal. He Isexplained the committee considered prohibitransmitted tionJudiciary method In which the disease to the constitution. amendment and Its symptoms. Twenty members of the 5.47 p. m. until noon Tuesat Adjourned were club present. Takes Vncntlon Trip. R W. Hansen, so- day. liciting freight agent for the Chicago & HOUSE. Northwestern railroad, accompanied by his noon. at Met sister Miss Irene Hansen, has gone to Los Naval and military committees continued Angeles for his vacation. He expects to re- - hearings on national defense. turn to Salt Lake by way of Portland andresolution Adopted making immediately the northwest. During his visit on the Pa- available $500,000 for the Mare Island navy on call the agents of the clfic coast he will New York navy arid the for $100,000 yard Northwestern line. for battleship construction equipment. yard creamery of Passed bill to increase the number of Spokane Dairy Show. Every will be represented at midshipmen at the naval academy. Importance n Utahshow 0 the Spokane dairy Passed bill to provide for coinage of February 24 to 26. according to J. E. Dorman, inspector in McKinley souvenir dollars. United Passed resolution authorizing use of 1000 charge of the Salt Lake office of thewho exStates btireau of animal Industry, tents and cots at the Birmingham enarmy a splendid showing. campment of the United Confederate Veterpects this state toR. make I. Rurton of Ogden and ans in May. Two Utah men. Lake, are on the Democrats In caucus ratified selection of fieorge C. Iarsen of Saltsaid the show will Democratic members of the new flood conDorman Mr. program. have the effect of raising the quality of trol committee. Utah dairy products. Adjourned at 5 p. m. until noon Tuesday. "Water Dennis of for Ryan Application the Ryan hotel. St. Paul, Minn., has filed on MARRIAGE. LICENSES second-fee- t water for Irrigation purfifty to be takenoffrom Beathe of springs poses EdwaM R. Johnson and Blanche I. May, ver county In the Sevier river by the pumpLake. Salt be will also Canals constructed. ing system. The area is 6120 acres. The filing fee was George Lally and Minerva J, Reeves, Salt $12. ZQ. The Salt Lake agent of the St. Paul Lake. Earl J. Jensen and Myrtle B. Johnson, man Is J. W. Curtis of 3S W. Second South Salt Uke. street. Nathan J., Fetherolf and Nora Wanless, Lake. Salt REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS Max II. Hensolt and Emma D. Fennemore, Salt Lake. C. P. Castle to J. E. Deardorff, lot 1. George Meslch and Toma Stimac, Bing$ 10 ham. block 32. plat A Ulrle U. Hlfkev to C. P. Castle, lot 1, Frank L. Hawk and Maude Ellen Illtt, 10 Malta. Ida. block 32. plat A Beldon Ferguson to Alice E. Moyle. secPaul II. Gentz and May Lucile Gundry, tion 16, township 2 south, range 1 Lake. Salt 600 east Gardner and Hilma E. Haefer, Martin Chris Tryfon to George H. Stathos, all Mont. Butte, block t, Chambers Townsite.. 500 lots Thomas W. Dee and Dora II. Taylor, Salt J. A. Fritsch to W. S. Larneraux. all lots Lake. block 1. Rice & S.'s subdivision.. 10 Watson Eastman and Gerthrude Radecke-ValleFred Hermann to Gertrude Hermann, all Portland, Ore. 1 lots 13 to 17. block 11, Clermont R. Wright to II. D. Taylor, all Margaret BANK CLEARINGS block 1, Gilmer square 10 lots 27-Tracy Loan & Trust .company to Commercial Savings Beneficial company, Monday's clearings, $1,718,307.05; .same .". 10 day last year, $1,006,704.53. lot 4. block 61. plat A Orpheum.- - Vaudeville, p. m. . i- - r. Fol-lan- n, lf 100,-00- 13-- 1 4. -!. e, S, m.,-8.1- The principal event of the afternoon society circles will he the reception and tea to be given by Mrs. Frederick L. Oswald at Hotel Utah from 4 until 6 o'clock in honor of her 5 in Mrs. Robert H. Butterfield, a bride of the early new year. This evening at the W. H. Mclntyre residence on Seventh avenue Miss Marabout garet Mclntyre will entertain an inforat friends of her young forty mal dancing party. The Bluebird Dancing club will give the second in the scries of winter dan- I cing parties this evening at the Ladies' Literary clubhouse. Mrs. Murray Sullivan will entertain members of her bridge club and a few other guests this afternoon at a luncheon and bridge at her home on First avenue. The Tuesday Luncheon club will be entertained today by Mrs. Jack S. on S street. Selfridge at her home The marriage of Miss Nora Wanless and N. J. Fetherolf will take place this : evening at the home of Mr.A. and Mrs. N. J. Sheckell. The Rev. P. Simpkin of Phillips Congregational church will i officiate. The young couple will be at- I tended by Miss Luella Irvine as bridesmaid and J. M. Fetherolf of Ogden as best man. 'I 'I The. different sorority homes will hold open house this afternoon as part of the "prom" week celebration of the the University of Utah. This evening fraBeta Theta will entertain at the avenue, ternity house .p,..on Second Banner Review No. 11. Maccabees, and friends will be entertained this afternoon from 2 until 5 o'clock at the home of Mrs. H. K. Russell, 3;'. 7 S. Tenth East. Assisting Mrs. Russell will daughter Hearst-Vitagrap- GOODWIN RECITAL. mu.-sic- 'i- be Mrs. N. Offer, Mrs. F. Campbell, Mrs. E. Lloyd, Mrs. A. Spear, Mrs. J. L. Elia-soMrs. C. H. Livingston, Mrs. AY. T. Rowe, Mrs. J. Ryan, Mrs. Merrill, Mrs. I. H. Chilton, Mrs. W. P. Morford, Mrs. J. II. Saxman, Mrs. C. B. Patterson, Mrs. A. Cline. Mrs. M. Elder, Mrs. II. Bauer and Mrs. L. M. Blackman. t'fi Sjt The tourist section of the Ladies' ,C State street. The Salt Lake circle of the Woman's Republic, will meet this evening at the home of Mrs. G. K. Ott in Altadena apartments at 8 o'clock. A literary program will be presented and all members are requested to be present. Radiant chapter No. 12, O. E. S., will hold its regular meeting at Masonic temple this evening at 8 o'clock. '( The Woman's Peace party will meet this evening at S o'clock in the assembly room of the Commercial club. The Rev. W. W. Reese will give an address on "The Church and the War." j'j Reynolds ircle No. 1, Ladles of the G. A. R., will hold the regular meeting this afternoon. A vice president will be elected and also a delegate and alternate to attend the department encampment. The Seekers' Literary club will meet this afternoon with Mrs. J. T. Beless, 6G7 S. First West. A program en notable pioneers will be given by the following members: Mrs. C. D. Foltz, Mrs. W. M. Havenor, Mrs. R. J. Burdette, Jr., and Mrs. Frank Rumel. studio, al vf; c The second - "Stanley In Darkest Africa," a two-rewild animal feature wherein Stanand the New ley at last meets Livingston York Herald's long search ends with some moments in this interesting story. thrilling Lockwood and his costar May AlliHarold son play tlie leads in the two-aromantic drama of the west, "The Man in the Sombrero." "Beaten at the Bath" is the title of the comedy reel and ends the Mehesy program for the day. el ct Wilmot-Goodwi- n !i ! I !! recital will be given this evening in the ballroom of the Hotel Utah under the auspices of the Salt Lake Woman's club. The Ladles Aid society of First Congregational church will meet today in the church parlors. All members and friends are invited. 'I' The Ladies' Auxiliary of the U. C. T. will meet this afternoon at 2.30 o'clock at the Newhouse hotel. The Charity circle will meet at 2 o'clock at Sewing the home of Mrs". Louis Simon, 34 Sixth East. I t the younger generation. Eugene Walters, the author, won his fame as a playwright when this piece was produced by David opinion of paBelasco, and it is trons of the Wilkes that Mr. Walters could not have written a part more adaptable to Nana Bryant than that of Laura Murdock, the girl who makes a plucky fight to reestablish herself In an honorable position in the social world. "The Easiest Way" continues all week, with matinees Thursday and Saturday. BBi PANTAGES. "The New Producer" is the title of a novelty operatic selection to be rendered at Pantages theatre tonight for the first time at the second performance. The singers with Mme. Doree, who head this week's bill in selections from grand operas, will participate in "The New Producer." It is the story of a grand opera troupe arriving at the theatre too late to put on their costumes for the performnace and the fun that ensues is interwoven with some beautiful selections. This bill at Pantages closes with today's three performances, and the last show tonight will be the regular "getaway" Tuesday night performance. Pa ORPHEUM. Frank Crumlt, that comedian at the Orpheum who is scoring so heavand a guitar, ily with a few songs, a ukelele is none other than the fat member of "The Three Collegians." with which a,ct he apon two separate occasions, durpeared here seasons. Crumit has a method recent ing of delivery all his own, and makes as great a "single" as could be desired. If the laughter didn't interrupt him so often, his songs could be heard better. PS ORPHEUS CLUB. Members of the Oras much interest pheus club are manifestingconcert as are the in their forthcoming big music-lover- s of Salt Lake. The club meets tonight in Consolidated Music hall for its last rehearsal before its formal bow Thurschurch. The day night at First Methodist be given to the club's finishing touches will work by Director A. II. Peabody and Wr. C. Ebaugh, assistant director and accompanist. V - nt WILKES. "The Easiest "Way," which is on for a week's engagement at the Wilkes 4I theatre on State street, is not without toa broad and impressive moral, especially 5 79 N. -- Anglo-America- MEHESY. tC p. Tlie chorus of the Ladies' Literary club will meet this afternoon at 2 o'clock with Mrs. E. C. Wetzell at her foreign experts. She is gento be the only authentic exdances of the far east. Ensuperabundance of grace, she was well fitted to absorb the customs of India, where her father was and still is a n prominent officer in the service. Roshanara's performance is marked by keen , sincerity and a powerful technique. She dances with the mind as much as with the feet, and you go away feeling that you have heard a great secret. The old India of jewels and fairy tales and moonlight and monkeys, not the new India of tramways and telegraph poles, is revealed, for it is one of the great truths and held that the soul of a nation Isascaught a butterfly is in its songs and dances dance caught in a net. It is the old native of India that Roshanara loves, and it is these dances that she has brought from the east to the west. She is Irish on one side and very English on the other, and yet she bears the curious marks of oriental blood. By the Press Agents ! ries." of many erally conceded ponent of the dowed with a j ! club meets this morning at Literary 10.30 o'clock at the clubhouse. Mrs. S. F. Fenten will read the paper entitled "Ancestral Estates and Their Memo- came indors?e-me- j n, an entire ROSHANARA, with the critical i t habitat in New Y'ork City. The recital tonight will begin at the ROSIIANARA AT ORPIIKUM. now at the Orpheum, i v- tenor-bariton- with I c given last night at Hotel THE concert by Wllmot Goodwin and his associate artists under the auspices of the Salt Lake Women's club was well attended. The program, heretofore announced, was followed throughout and the applause with which each number was received was evidence that the desire of the visiting musicians to make a .good impression was fully realized. This because the program was only one cycle of tiie entire repertory to be presented here, the second cycle to be given at Hote Utah tonight. The trio headed by Mr. Goodwin somee and sometimes basso, times as the scope of a selection may according require is on a concert tour of the west under the auspices of the National Society for Broader Education, of which the man: aging director is Dr. Guy Carleton Lee, former president of Johns Hopkins university. Mr. Goodwin is an opera singer of extensive was with experience, several years of which the Aborn Opera company. He has a repoperas in various lanertory of twenty-eigh- t guages, but he sings his operatic selections in translated texts. One exception last night to this rule was the aria in his second group, the discovery song from Verdi's opera "Un Ballo in Maschera," which was given a dramatic reading in the original. The associate artists, Maurice Warner, a Kansas City violin prodigy of former years who has had training in Europe, and Lee Cronican of Carlisle. Pa., piano soloist and to an excellent accompanist, give diversity semiclassic and grouping of classical compositions. Mr. Goodwin comes origCanadian province inally from the far east the trio claims its of New Brunswick, and same hour, 8.15 prompt, change of program. I .,- edy. Kin-noul- Herald-Republica- .15 p. Wilkes. Ernest Wilkes Stock company in "The Easiest Way." Pantages. Vaudeville, 2.45 p. m., 7.30 p. m., 9.15 p. m. American. Continuous, 2 to 11 p. m. Anita Stewart and Earle Williams in "The Sins of the Mothers," New York Sun's prize winning film drama; Pathe News; Miss Agnes Von Bracht. dramatic soprano; American concert orchestra. Prof. J. J. McClellan, director. Rex. Continuous, 2 to 11 p. m. Pearl W'hite, Bruce McRae and Creighton Hale in "Hazel Kirke"; "Gertie's Busy h weekly. Day," the Liberty. Continuous, 2 to 11 p. m. Lulu Glaser in the Universal comedy drama, "Love's Pilgrimage to ""America"; Animated weekly. Mehesy. The matinee idol, Harold Lockwood, with May Allison in the "Man in the Sombrero," romantic western drama. "Stanley in Darkest Africa." wild animal picture, the concluding episode of this series. "Beaten at the Bath," a Riley Chamberlain com- , rr TODAY'S EVENTS. TODAY. ATTRACTIONS F . 5 OCIETY musemetits...... i MISS ANNA M'CORNICK, who quite returned from an extended stay in the east, was the hostess at a prettily arranged bridge tea yesterday afternoon at the McCornick residence on Center street. The social affair was given in honor of Mrs. Prentiss N. Gray, formerly Miss Laura Sherman, who is the guest of her sister Mrs. George J. Gibson. Three tables of the game were played, those present being intimate friends of the honor guest. Crimson carnations and ferns were seen in the dainty floral decorations. SUCCESSFUL ( LI H IEETLG. The attractive home of Mrs. Hiram E. Booth on S. Ninth East was thrown open yesterday afternoon for the February meeting of tiie Woman's Republican club, which was a largely attended affair. The literary program consisted of an excellent paper by Mrs. Margaret Zane Cherdron on "What the Suffragists Are Doing in Washington." Then payer was given in Mrs. Cherdron's scholarly were style, and many personal experiences noted of her recent visit to the national well-know- capital. Mrs. Kate D. Shill followed with a talk on "What the- Suffragists Are Doing in England." The historian's report was read by Mrs E. O. Leatherwood and showed the club to be in a flourishing condition.. An interesting feature of the afternoon was the presentation of a handsome Jacobean chair to Mrs. H. L. Cummir.gs, the appreciaretiring president, as athetoken oftwo tion for her services years. past Mrs. E. O. Leatherwood made a neat little speech on the occasion, which presentation was responded to by Mrs. Cummings. Mrs. George Mueller contributed as devocal selections, accompanied by lightful Miss Gertrude Slater, "Far Across the Desert Sands" from the song cycle of "Love and Damascus" by Sindar, "Who Knows" and " "Good-nigh- t, by Ball. were served at the refreshments Dainty close of the program by Mrs. Booth, who was assisted by her daughter Miss Irma Booth and Miss Eloise Berry. The other hostesses were Mrs. J. B. Hampton, Mrs. S. C. Dallas Mrs. M- M. Neilson, Mrs. Kimball Tilton and Mrs. Mark Tuttle. The entertainment committee of the club held a meeting at the close of the program, when it was decided to give a tea. the time and place to be announced later. (Continued on following-page- .) - Good-night- - pre-Lent- en t |