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Show THE HKRALD-REPUBUCA- SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH, MONDAY, MARCH 27, 1916 N, WHEN A FELLER NEEDS A FRIEND OGDEN DEPARTMENT FL000SIS EXPECTED Becomes Center for Despite . Tameness of Ogden Sale of Intermountain Steeds; River, Authorities Are Far New Yards Are Built. From Relieved. to Tt (Sp:lI nermld Itcpnb!!cn. French government will be shipped Into Ogden every week with the comnew horse yards and pletion of the ring" now being- constructed in buying the local railway yards by the Ogden llorso Saks company. At present old stock yards aro blng utilized, but - more extensive selling will be done when th new equipment Is ready. which has. succeeded This Horse Sales companycon-of the Mll-- scompany, City Montana, ha tho western district and tract with the Frpnch government will aond men throughout the and northwestern states to buv horses. thr weks several hunfor nearly dred had of horses have been fed here whll the desirabte animals have been elected xnJ shipped out. Svn horse th anl-I- n ahoers aro . employed putting to-.condition and in addition from five to ten "bror.rho busters" are In h employ of th company. Th largest consignment the comdie this spring pany expects to will hfr?s to be nearly hown to the French b"ard here rext will that the It Is llnely May. rro-e.-t".lho !, tiy the an'ti'-nrln-- M I lers besides should thre be other the French. Inter-mouni.il- In-.lj- n hr d ; d BOY, AGED 8, IS KIDNAPED IfUved it Have Youth California Special to The IT r'-- Norton has been In Arizona, where he Is interested in mining. He was a Progressive in the 1912 campaign, folnathe lead of Victor lowing tional chairman of the Murdoch, Progressive and former member of Congress, party and Myron Rosewater. a former con of Kansas. In the elections' gressman or 1914 Mr. Norton ran as a Republican and was elected. "The rank and file of the sive party in the United StatesProgreshas re to the Republican party on acturned count of the mistakes and the errors made by the Democratic administraNorton. "The issue at tion," said Mr. in 1912 was a personal one Chicago between Taft and Roosevelt, and the Republican party was crazy to ever consider for a moment a personal quarrel, but the delegates were swept off their feet. "WThen reason was restored In 1914 the Republicans won. We want to get from the away feeling and we want to get personal away from the idea that man is above principles. I am for progressive legislation, but I have learned it cannot be accomplished by an internal fight in the only progressive party in this country." SimiNEItS LEAVE FOR EAST. J. Putnam Stevens and party, officers of the Shrine, Masonic, left yesterdayImperial afternoon on the 'Pacific Limited for Chicago after a visit to El Koran temple of the Mystic Shrine. They are making a tour, visiting various shrines throughout the country. ra Ogden. March 26. Despite the tame-neof Ogden river the last three days, authorities aro far county and city their fears that the from relieved of rlvor will cause further depredations, for the reports from Oftden wea-thevalley to-Is thawing day were that and the newly fallen a;aln Isprevalent snow fast meltlngr. Beneath this new snow Is the still which blanket of lastIf winter, heavy the sun shines will also melt rapidly warm Another rain, it is warmly. result in disastrous feared, would In the city ar.d especially in where the previous ipilcn canyon, flood has wiakefied the road and bridges. The told weather caused such a drop In the waters of both OKdc n and Weber of the city that the farmer river were able to make wed to the repairs levee at Warren which broke last 600 acres. Thursday. Fteld reprInundating entatlves of the Amalgamated Susar company ere not alarmed because cf the delay In planting seed In those sections that have been both er?d by the flood. They say the silt carried upon the land will ahave a fer-In and that delay tilising effect of a week or ten days will planting not make an appreciable difference. n Residents In the vicinity of the river brldce at Washington avenue say they intend appealing to the city commissioners to have the city oredgo out the river channel next fall at low water time so thai next spring will not see them driven from their homes by encroaching water. They point out as that itto would not cost and Increase much dredjre the riveras It will cost the height of the bank the city and Individual property owners to repair the damage wrought by the flood of last we?k. In County enfployees are at work at canyon repairing the roads Ogdn the most dancerou places. The gorge Is sttll closed to traffic. cs r con-sequenc- es Off-de- MRS, KOPLIX BURIED. The funeral of Mrs. Lena Koplin was held at ciating. lompadour. ma!t Amount t rerfd In Two Ojjden Unralnrlf. Ttie IIersT4-RepnM'.es- 7 a Oscn. Marrh 2fi. Daylight robbers this afternoon ransacked the homes of Adams avenue, and J. .? Harris. 2 Mrs.' M. A. Harris. Zt" Adams avenue, a while the owners were attending hom the J. J. Harris funeral. Frm about $ - and th intruders . obtained ' f th ' ash tUen lf. jom lowi about !" was by breaking In th home children's brinks. opt nMrs. M. A. Harris the burglars of found $3..'.' In small hane and passed a quantity of silverware iyin withup easv h. Kntranre was trained in in each :ase by prying open rear windows. DRIVER HURT IN ACCIDENT " d T'-i- f by street Car nn.l Victim Mtferi Injured lllf. If 'I It S'1 M f f fry Tll Frank Ittatr, 'Zl cden. March ortd stret. a driver for the Twent OxdiTi' Parking Provision omj any. Is 'onflned to his Lrr.- with Injuries Miffered yesterday whn his auto rn o bit was struck by a street rar at Twenty-sevent- h ftreot and Harlow avenue. Witnesses said Blair endeavored the tracks and apparently to rro failed to V.. e the car fomin? behind him Burton, motorm.tn. by rethe probably preventeil versing HIairs tbelnc fatally hurt. He hat an his rlsht hip and is cut about fntury the head and body. ClIOOI, 11M1 HI'.Altll. Oscden, March 2. The State Industrial srhnn! band. directed by K. in-V. music at the Nichols. Instructor In City Hall stitution, gave a concert of the musicians Many trda. park unuer 11 yejur s of a see. are H v-s- TRAIN CREW ABSOLVED w :. e. - ! A- - - -- , MRS. GREGORY IS BURIED t'nifarian f hnreh I'sttnr PreschM nt t.nt Illte for ?nlt I nke Wnmnn. The funeral n.' f Mri. llnth Ann Oretr-or- , K wife f who died wn heldJreory. at the I'nitarlan -. . at p ni yc.nterdaJohn t t iciat) n;c. Ma ink. tbe pastor. Mrs. nt R. U lrr srory reeory was thf wife of ;ir,r.'.i Ferrv. Ida. F'le was born "t !n Salt Lake Olivet cemetery. n-v- Burial was In Mount Hard-to-Cu- re Lack of Caution on Part of Victim Cause Assigned for CITY TO HAVE Eldredge Fatality. SpeelAl to The TleraltlReitabllcaa. f'icdeti, March 2. A Itamberger held board of Inquiry meeting railway here today reported that Horace ElIT years old. came to his death dredge. In Bountiful Friday morning because he did not use due caution. The train crew was absolved from blame. The board was composed of Julian M. James 3. Carver, N. S. Wllt-stBamberger. R. A. Pierce. J. M. Bead and J. 11. Uevine. The findings: that the said Horace Kldredge "First, a passenger on train No. 37 was northbound of the Salt Lake & Ogden railway and alighted from said train No. 37 while the same was In motion and before It had reached Bountiful station, and ran around J. he rear of said train No. 37 and on to the southbound track between said train No. 37 and the station of Bountiful and directly In front of train No. ?.8, received Injuries causing his death. 'Second. wc further find that no blame attaches to the crew of train No. 38 and that they were violating no rules of the company and had their train under proper control at the time of the accident and that all customary station signals were given In and passing the Bountiful approaching both station by the crews of train No. til and train No. 3S. "Third, we further find that the deceased could have avoided the accident by having remained on his train until It reached the or If the deceased had used station, due care and precaution for his own safety In disembarking fromof train No. 37 and crossing the track the ralroad company to reach the station." Funeral services for Horace who was killed at Bountiful Thursdayaccidentally nluht when struck by a southbound Bamberger car, will be held at 2 o'clock Tuesday afternoon at West Bountiful meeting house. Acdesiring to view the body quaintances may do so at the family residence In West Bountiful between 11 a.m. and 1 p. m. the day of the funeral. e. o O . o O O O May Find in Cuticura Soap "Awl Ml Mount Pleasant Ilejrliis Campaign Committee Nnmetl to Cosdnct Work. Mount Pleasant, March 26. The city of Mount Pleasant has decided to enter the state clean town contest. The Initial step has been taken by the city council and at its regular session last the following executive commitnight tee was appointed: Chairman, Mayor Daniel Ilasmussen, John Gunderson, A. K. Mcintosh, H. Le Roy Nellson, JoBent R. Hansen, Thomas seph Seely, Sorensen, Mrs. O. N. West, Mrs. C.AsW. a subcommittee for the Clemensen. work each social, educational and reIn the city is religious organization to act two members questedtheto appoint executive committee. The with council has decided to purchase buttons with the Inscription. "A Clean Mount Pleansant," for every man7 woman nnd child of the city to wear. It Is determined that when the Inspection cf the cities of the state is made this fall Mount Pleasant will rank among the cleanest. council decided last night to The of contract for the remodeling let a city hall. City John C. Matson was appointed city Inspector to take the place of Rasmus Rasmussen, resigned. ROOSEVELT NEWS ITEMS Kl-drede- Chuck-o-Luc- ng - and Ointment Herald-Repnblicso- Sjeedv Grateful and Permanent ; Relief. Besides, anyone anywhere may try them before he buys them. I - s -- Free Sample Each Skin Book by return mail to any sufferer from skin troubles or scalp troubles with loss of hair, who has failed to obtain permanent relief from other remedies. 32-pa- ge For Free Sample address postal-carDmilun, "Culicur. Dept. XX.riHace io U. 3. told la every town aJ !. d , - m PLAN' BIG , AND GIRLS, CLIP THESE PLAN U. S. TOUR !Votes for Women' Workers to Reach Salt Lake May. 11, After Zigzag Trip. With the object of organizing the voters of the twelve enfranchised states into an effective force for promoting the equal suffrage cause In other commonwealths, a delegation of thirty-siwomen, one from each of the nonsuffra.ge states, will start from Washington for the west, following a conference In the national capital of national and state officers of the Congressional Union. The special delegation will endeavor to line up the women voters of the a compact voting suffrageThestates into calls for a body. itinerary tour and the cost, approximately $50,000, will be defrayed with already pledged. Salt subscriptions Lake Is one of the cities to be visited and a conference of women will be held here. A day will also be spent in Ogden. The Washington conference will be held April 8 and 0 at the national headof the Congressional Union. quarters On the evening of April 9 the delegation will leave for Chicago. Stops and conferences will be held in Chinnd Wichita, cago, Kansas City, Topeka the delegation arriving in Denver April 15. A side to Cheyenne will be will proceed from taken and thetrip party Denver to Colorado Springs to Arizona, arriving In Williams on April 18. Prescott nnd Phoenix will be visited and the delegation will reach Los An21. After visiting San geles April the will arrive delegates Francisco, in Reno, New. April 26. visit Carson City the next day, arrive In Sacramento on the 28th and arrive in Salem, Ore., 29. April Portland and Seattle and Spokane, will be visited in turn, and on Wash., May 6 the party will reach Great Falls, Mont. Helena and Butte will be visited on May. 7 and 8, the delegation arOn riving In Boise. Ida., on May 9. and May 10 I'ocatello will be reached deleon the afternoon of that day the will arrive in Ogden. gation next afternoon. May 11, the parThe will reach Salt Lake for a conferty ence. The start eastward will be made the afternoon of May 12. Washington will be reached May 17. From Butte the party will travel over the Oregon the route Short Line and to Denver will be over the Denver & Rio Grande. Among the women who have signified their Intention to go in the party are Mrs. Harriet Stenton Blatch, in of the political department of charge the union; Miss Anna Constable of New John Rogers of New York, York, Mrs. Van Winkle of Morristown, Mrs. Mlna N. J., president of the New Jersey Woman's Political union, and Mrs. Florence Bayard HUles of Wilof the Delaware mington,of chairman branch the union. women x thirty-elght-d- ver, arrived here "yesterday with refor .William Paulson, quisition Inpapers the Colorado city on a wanted of forgery. Paulson, accordcharge ing to White, was ofa collector for isa that city, and company plumbingwith checks, chargedwere having negotiated which made payable to his emWhlto vyill return with hla ployers. tomorrow. " prisoner AA Stock & Sons Co.. vertisement, 63 Invitations; to Be Mailed Today for Display to He Made Here Next Month, Invitations will be mailed today to the artists, architects and fine art and applied science craftsmen In Utah to participate in the art exhibition to be held under the auspices of the Utah Art institute in the art gallery of the UniApril 1, and versity of Utah, beginning the month. It continuing throughout is that responses wjjl result in expected several hundred exhibits being on view. placed The formal ooening of the exhibition will take place April 8. President D. C. Young of the art institute said last nigrht that the exhibit would proband finest in the ably be ofthethelargest state. history Utah artists and craftsmen will Only be invited to rubmit specimens of their work. Tlie bulk of the exhibits will come from Salt Lake, but Ogden and other Utah communities will be represented. FRIENDS TRIBUTE PAY rose bushes. E. 2d So. Ad- MOVIE COUPON GOOD FOR ONE PART OF A UNIVERSAL MOVIE TICKET When presented before May OA 1, A ICT?i M PAPTQ lVXrVL-lrliVlU at any redeeming station. a complete ticket admitting you t0 theatre FREE of charge. 1916, THESE THEATRES REDEEM UNIVERSAL TICKETS REX. Logan. UTAH. REX. Hyrum. Smithfield. AMERICAN, Salt Lake, VYNER, ELITE, Tremonton. HILLY ARD. Smithfield LIBERTY, Salt. Lake. NEVADA. LA'TONIA, Layton. REX, Salt LaKe. COPPERFIELD, Bingham. EAGLE'S HALL Parltr ISIS, Salt Lake. Salt Lake. PRINCESS Delta. PHOTOPLAY, O P E R Ar,Fv BOUNTIFUL rtAV1U- EMPIRE. Saft Lake. ISIS, Blackfoot. OPERA ORPHEUM, PRINCESS, Sugar House, KAYSrILLE Blackfoot. T A r K! T HOUSE. t'reston. rtvv-RHAPPY HOUR, Murray. FARMINGTON HOUSE. COLUMBIA, Provo ' ORIENT THEATRE ELLEN, Provo, Malad, Idaho American lork, Utah. MALAD PRINCESS, Provo. US ' TOOELE OPERA HOUSE. SEEMORE. Garland. WYOMING. JOHNSON'S, Tooele. REX. Richfield. WYOMING, Evanston. BONITA, Huntington. EKO, Price. NEW KEMMERER, Kern- IRIS. Murray. VYNER, Providence. merer. HIAWATHA. Hiawatha. VYNER, Richmond. A TVfao-Tl'- . ) Hfrr;.? av MEX HELD. WOMKX rOJII'b Meyer Cohen, 24, a bellboy, and 25, who gave his occuGeorge asZansV a clerk, were arrested In the pation hotel late yesterday afternoon Shelton and locked In the city jail on an assault charge. Two women, giving their names as Grace Young and Mabel were the witGeorge, women was so nesses. One of the complaining severely beaten as to, require the attentions of a police surgeon. According to the women, they were accosted In the hallway of the hotel and forced Into a room, where they were beaten. SLEUTH ARRIVES FOR PRISONER. W. L. White, city detective from Den- Bailey EXHIBIT ART Eulogies of Many Friends Mark Obsequies of the Late John A. Silver. The funeral of tho late John A. Silver was held yesterday afternoon in h ward meeting the The services were in charge house. of Bishop Piatt, ana the singing directThere was a ed by Bishop Beesley. urofuslon of floral tributes. hBishop William Wood of the Twenty-fourtward offered the opening prayer. Eulogies were delivered by Seymour B. Young, James Corbett of Garland, Ell A. Folland. B. S. Young and Samuel J. Holmes. The work of Mr. Sliver in the community and his sturdy personal In the adcharacter were emphasizedwere dresses. The pallbearers Joseph A. Silver, llyrum A. Silver, WTilliam P. Silver, George J. Silver, Frank J. Silver, brothers of the deceased, and SylIn vester Q. Cannon, a tho terment was In City T. cemetery, A. Clawson. grave being dedicated by RESIDENCE IS ROBBED. of the During the absence from home the resiafternoon, family ofyesterday O. W. Rollins, 136 Dunbar dence avenue, was entered by aA burglar by a rear window. quantity of breaking small jewelry was stolen. Including stick pins and various rings, watches, keepsake articles. Twelfth-Thirteent- son-in-la- w. Probate and Guardianship Notices Consult county clerK or the respective sjgiejrjjfjr IN THE DISTRICT COURT, PRO-bat- e division, In and for Salt Lake county, State of Utah. In the matter of the estate of John G. Morrison, deceased. Notice. The petition for approval and settlement of the annual account of the administratrix of the estate of John G. Morrison, ondeceased, has been set for Friday, the 31st day of hearing March, A..D. 1916, at 2 o'clock p. m.. at the county courthouse, in the courtroom of said court, in Salt Lake City, Salt Lake county, Utah. Witness the clerk of said court, with the seal thereof affixed, this 16th day of March, A. D. 1916. THOS. HOMER, Clerk. (Seal) Clerk. By J. E. Clark, Deputy Booth, Lee, Badger & Rich, Attorneys for Petitioner. IN THE DISTRICT COURT, PRO-bat- e division, in and for Salt Lake county. State of Utah. In the matter of the estate of Morgan V. James, deceased. Notice. The petition of Sarah J. James, prayfor the issuance to herself of leting ters of administration in the estate of deceased, has been Morgan V. James, t4ie 7th set for hearing" on Friday, of April, A. D. 1916, at 2 o'clock p. day m., the county courthouse, in the courtat room of said court, in Salt Lake City, Salt Lake eounty, Utah. Witness the clerk of said court, with the seal thereof affixed, this 22d day of March. A. D. 1916. THOS. HOMER. Clerk. (Seal) By J. E. Clark, Deputy Clerk. B. R. Howell, Attorney for Petitioner, . THESE BUSINESS HOUSES WILL REDEEM N COUPONS. HAVE YOUR COUPONS EXCHANGED FOR TICKETS HERALD-REPUBLICA- SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH. Martin Coal Co., 47 S. Main. 55 S. Main. Keeley Ice Cream Co., S. Main. 70 Salt Lake Knitting. S. Main. 103 Owl Drug Co., Shiplers, 144 S. Main. 33 Paragon ment t-,i- Shoe . Repairing . Shop South!01"5' Repa,rlnS Repairing Co., E. enth EashtardS Grocer3r- 2204 S. Sev- Fassell Grocery 619 E. Fourth South. N. B. K store 814 E. First South. J. H. Hulse & Sons. 703 S. West s O J. Yost, 124 W. First South. Cafe, 1061 E. Twelfth South. PROVO, UTAH. William Thornton, druggist. Provo City Bakerv. W. National French Cleaning Co. x Second South. Co.. 155 - w. Greenewald Furniture Co., Broadway. Butter-KlPopcorn Stand, Kenyon Basement SpHicher's Shoe Store, building. Judge Vandyke-Davidso- n Drug Co., 380 S. Ed.IaHogan, Grocery, 349 S. West ModeeTPShoo Base- Fourth East and Fourth StBroadwS!0e st 106 Aempie-Clement- A. B. LOGAN, UTAH. Cheney. Hoover Drug Co., 201 W. Second Economy Supply Co. AMERICAN FORK, UTAH Coombs' Drug Co., Fourth South and Wm. Thornton Co. American Fork Drug South. bakery." G C Phillips, 224 E. Fifth South 66 E. Fifth U W. GreeiUfe". SMITHFIELD. UTAH. Salt Lake Cleaning & Dyeing. 265 S. W. O. Anderson. State. TREMONTON. UTAH Keelev's. 260 S. State. Waldron & Harris, Gen. Men 80 E. Second South Co., & Scott, drugs. Dayton Drug Johnson & Erickson, 118 E. Second Thompson HYRUM, UTAH. Dusuih'Drug Co.. First South and Home Mercantile company. MURRAY, UTAH. First South Shepherd Grocery. 178 E. 265 Co., 16 S. State St. Murray W. North Murray Mercantile City Pharmacy.140 S. Leary's Cash Grocery, State SL Bakery, wInTcelepharmacy. 401 N. Second West.- Murray CityMAGNA, UTAH. Sev1045 S. William Blair, Groceries, The Toggery. Union Mercantile & Baking Ceu Mercantile 375 W. South Co., Hardln Olympia Candy Co. BOUNTIFUL. WTRn Herrlck, 170 W. South Temple. Bountiful Drug Co. S. G. Spencer. 240 State. Bountiful Feed & Grocery. Witherspoon Drug Co., Fifth East FARMINGTON. and Broadway. South. Co. Rampton Drug J M. Butler, 462 E. Second East Drug Store. Farmington C. & M. Co. Whitworth's Eighth 802 E. Second South. Third East Drug Store, Stephens Bros. LAYTON. Whitworth's 301 E Second South. Adams & Sons Co. Lloyd Drug Co., Seventh South and TOOELE, UTAH. Shoe8 Shining Parlor, 170 S. Economy Clothing Store. Liberty William H. Vowles. Tooele Standard Furniture Co. .7 avenue. 564 Third Co., Lion Drug Sherwood's Pharmacy, Seventh South P. V. MorrelL SANDY. UTAH. and State. j-Vermillion Pharmacy, 401 S. Ninth Sandy Mercantile Co. ' IDAHO. MALAD, 400 E. Eleventh R. T. Owens Co., Ltd., Gen. Mer. Waterloo Pharmacy, South. IDA. Drug Co., E street and Sixth Avenue Center. East Market, People's Sixth avenue. Bakery, 341 E. Center. West Side Pharmacy, Eighth West Model The Fair Store, 439 E. Center. and Second South. Ninth M. Eldredge & Co., East Center. East an N. Acme Pharmacy, N. R. Eastman, East Center. Tenth South. the Jeweler, 344 E. Center. Grocery, 1123 E. Twelfth Smith, Thompson & Co., 348 E. Center. E. Larson W. South. Shoe Repairing Co., 1115 E. Peterson Book Store. Progress White Hardware Co. J Twelfth South. Co.. Pocatello. i. Sugar Candy Co., 2110 S. Eleventh Main Electric PRESTON. IDAHO. mi Granite Drug Co., Twelfth. South and! OSgEf . i Economy Supply Co v J . ' POC-JTELL- O, ; ; Eleventh East. , ! bill for increasing the army, Wesley King, chairman of the joint Fort Douglas committee of the Commercial and Rotary clubs, announced yesterday that he has concluded not to go to Washington at this "time as had been hl original plan.the He expects ofto go, however, after program preparedness legislation has been carried out. "Advices I have received from Washington indicate that Congress will accomplish sometMng. It looks now as 1 though a compromise will be reached under which we. will get a larger! army and the states will re-- J standing lain some control over the national! guard. "When I was at St. Louis attending was the preparedness convention, there some doubt as to whether Congress would enact any legislation. I think this Mexican situation has brought action. "It had been the that I should leave for Washingtonplan with some other men immediately after the St. Loula convention and that we should use all the tInfluence we could muster In an elfo.-to accelerate preparedness legislation. "That is not necessary now, it seems. But ;f the law goes on the to Washington rtatute books I will gowar and so right Into the department too early and talk Fort Douglas. It is lo do that now, but after the Increase for the army becomes assured It will be time to take up with the war department the matter of seourlngfora brithe gade post and supply station army." TELEGRAPH OFFICIALS IX TOWN. M. T. Cook, general manager of the of the Western Pacific coast division Union Telegraph company, and a party of officials from the San Francisco office arrived in Salt Lake yesterday In the prifrom Los morning car Electric andAngreles vate a few hours spent here. They are on their way to Chicago to attend a conference of the company's general officials. THE HERALD - REPUBLICAN SUFFRAGETTES CLEAN-O- P Hy-ru- Skin Troubles With v Roosevelt, March 24. The Relief soannual ball ciety gave Its night. In the The ladles did themselves Friday proud programmed dance and In the refreshments served. k The better club, known as the "Jitney" club, held Its me-tlat Thursday eveningwas biweekly this Ashton hall. Five hundred played. The Cedarvlow Dramatic club presented "Down in Dixie," Wednesday evening. About fifty high school students acCALL COUNTY CONVENTION companied the boys' and girls' basketball teams of the Duchesne HlgTi school to Vernal Friday. At Vernal a Democrats of f'arhon County to Choose double-header was playeu Saturday Mate- Delegates. the to The evening withof the Uintah Br:d nepobl'can. fSpefl the season. academy, Price. March 25. The county Demo- last games will be held here cratic 4 convention PltOVO (JIRL WKDS. In the courthouse to nominate April nine delegates to attend the state Provo. March 26. Mr. and Mrs. democratic convention and the conHlselt announce the marriage of to Kflln N. Nelson, convention at their Salt gressional Lake, daughter Vera at d be convention will the home of the April &. The evening Wednesday of fifty-fiv- e from the bride in Provo canyon. delegates various precincts of the county as follows; Winter Quarters 3. Scofleld 4, CasRUSE FAILURE tle Gate 8. Htlper 4, Kenllworth 1, Price THEATRE 6. Wellington 6. Sunnysld 11. Clear Creek 7. Carbonvllle 1. Spring Glen 1, Storrs 1, Carbon 1. Hiawatha 1. A eon ed of Pa!nt1nj? Her Face filter White to Gain Entrance to Vaudeville Show. PRICE NEWS NOTES Georgia Bell wa arrested last night and booked on a charge of peace disturbance. According to employees of (Special ti The the woman, with the theatre, Pantages and A resolution calltwo Greeks, men. prea Price, March 26. for companion the Price mu- sented parquet tickets to the doorkeeping for appraisers was prewho refused to allow them to enter nicipal toelectric light plant council by City At- er, the sented main floor on the city the that theya F. n. Woods In compliance with are colored. The Bel ground woman drew torney a request by Mayor A. W. Jiorsley. At knife or razor and attacked an usher, the last council meeting the resolution according: to the story told to Patrolwas withdrawn until such time as the man M. D. McGinness. who made the Utah I'ower St Light company would arrest. The quartet had gone to anon terms for furnishing other theatre when McGinness made furnish to patrons and also to current figures the city the arrest. for street lights, providing- the people The women, the police say, painted voted to sell the plant, and the Utah their faces white before attempting to Power & Light company purchased it. gain admission to the vaudeville theDr. K. F. Chamberlain, city physi- atre. attention of the. city cian, called council to conditions in the city. After MUSICIAN LOST some discussion it was decided to give SPANISH the citizens until April 10 to clean up their premises, and those whoarefailed to Enrique firnnsdos and Wife Lost "When to be this request complv with The Steamer Sussex Wa Torpedoed. ordinance covering: prosecuted. to. Is cans be enforced. Paris, .March 28. Enrique Granados, garbage and his wife Preston Nutter of Nine Mile, a cat-th- e the Spanish composer, were passengers on the Sussex and are suit in the district raiser, has filed Carbon county to re- believed to have perished. court cover against Senor Oranados composed the opera $427 collected for. taxes. The forth that last year Mr. "Goyescas," which was produced recomplaint setswith the county assessor cently at the Metropolitan opera house. Nutter filed a tax statement in which he atated he New York. He and his wife were last had lOOi) head of cattle and twenty seen clinging to a small raft, accordh.ad of horses.: but the assessor dis- ing to survivors. Granados wa trying assessed him for a to keep tho raft straight with a small regarded this andanimals. tarter number of board which he used as a paddle. A boat was sent out to search for the haa applied for a diFrank IxRom vorce from Antonettla. JJcKcsa, alleg- composer and his wife, but no trace of them was found. ing ucMertion. com-pese- Aw CO BY BOARDOF INQUIRY .". pri"-ur- Antn BOYS Since the House has passed the Hay , TWO DAYLIGHT ROBBERIES JtpeUl Cannon ward chapel at 2 Cannon offiwas In City IntermentBishop the, p. m. yesterday, ter. t BE MADE LATER D -- one-four- th Oaden. Marrh Z. Police received toSheriff George day a telecr m f them 'al.. McAuley of Auturn, asking has! kidto look out f r a m n who Lnn !". v !r from naped Th whose Itockllrt, Z&. name wm rot rl vn. kidnaper, aitd toIt have was to Cobre and turchssM a tlrkt the Pacific relieved he took Vtern lofrom there Into Lak. cal poller re ivd word that"td-- a roan for from with a boy this Colon Pacific No the east on departed afternoon fciert Ilurk nt th train crew w d Wyout wires tortectlve oming authorities. The kidnap I bo Is described as with belnr of !lht corrrletlin freckle on hU face ar. I his hair cut 0R Kansas will give a Republican plurality in the coming1 elections and the Republicans and the Progressives will be together in the nominations and the elections, In the opinion of John F. Norton, state treasurer of Kansas, who was at the Hotel Utah yesterday. Mr. Ogden March 26. Hundreds of horses toOgden. be examined by Inspectors of the FORT BOOST TO OP. Kansas Treasurer Here Says Congress' Action for PreparSunflower State Will Give edness Makes Trip to CapRepublican Plurality. ital Not So Urgent. FURTHER DAMAGE FROM IN BIG CONSIGNMENTS ESSE-- G O jj R. FRENCH BUY HORSES P AMALGAMATION D. J. Greenwell, Correspondent. 1641 Washington avenue. Tels. 916 or I161-- Circulation Department. 2 street. Twenty-fift- h Telephone 315. By Briggs - i.-:trI- |