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Show THE ON CONGRESS t - Demand Is for Change in System, but Present Conditions Preclude Expenditures. V - nil i'" UNIFICATION OF METHODIST CHURCHES IS BELIEVED NEAR PROVES VAL GR GRECIAN SOIL Large Force Invading Country, Man Who Fought With Farragut Says He Will Give SI 000 Evacuating Garrisons ,Qf for-- ; for Young Recruit. ing No Resistance: BR ING FREEDOM NEEDED 191G AGED WARROR BULGARS ON SAYS PEACE TO Electrification of Raiiroads De- -. pends on Development of Water Power. LAWS SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH, MONDAY, MAY 20, N, MRS. OBREGON SENDS U. S. WOMEN MESSAGE CHARGES WAIT LIBERAL HERALD-REPUBLICA- YORK, May 28. Himself too (Continued From Page 1.) NEW to join the colors, and firm in garian troops, the correspondent adds, Soldier's Bride Hopes for Sister- are belief on the that his beloved country is between Oktchilar and going hood of Mothers of AmerKanthla and on the left bank of the threatened with real danger, an aged The Bulgarians have but wealthy fruitgrower of Easton; Pa., river Nestos. ica and Mexico. extended their 'occupation in the re- who served as a private of marines' unto the station and der Farragut "during the' civil war, is gion of Demir-llissEl Taso, May 28. "Tell the women of to part of the environs of the .vil- today tottering along the streets of York in quest of a substitute to the United States that the women of lage. The usual cannonading Is re- New Is willing .to pay a large ported along the rest of the front, with whom he Mexico have an Ideal of free womanto take his place in the ranks on a the bounty. engagement infantry hood toward which they arc striving. leftlively marine corps. ' of the pr'esent-da- v of bank the Vardar. The road may be long and weary, but old warrior, who The white-haire- d it we will achieve our dream at last. refused to divulge his name, stated Mum Mretlns Called. is his belief that every patriotic man With them we shall eventually form a Saloniki. via Parrs. May 2S. As 'an of means, too old to serve himself, free sisterhood of the western contiof the popular Indignation outgrowth shpuld find a substitute. nent. Keep a stout heart." Our hopes from Greek! the of violation "I'll get a man to serve in my place resulting will scon be realized." if I have to pay him a thousand dolThat Is the message of Senora Maria he told Capt. Frank E. Evans, for tomorrow to protest against lars." in of the local marine Tapis . Obregon, bride' of Carranza's here charge of the German and Bulwar minister, to the women of the the action "Uncle Sam needs station. troops. d men these United States. She made this state- garian days not to an The position of Kupel is imporin solely. march parades ment during the visit of General Obre- tant one. preparedness It dominates the defile lead- I think citizen should every patriotic is gon to the border to confer with Gen- ing to Demlr-Hisswhich bridge, in getting men to enlist. I served eral Scott and other American officials. the key to Seres and which also is re- aid long ago, but nowfindI to have been occupied. An ad- actively in the Senora Obregon Is a singularly ported next do the must thing andstead." versary thus controls the railroad from a man to join the best beautiful woman. Her face Is of a Saloniki in my ranks to Kavalla. wholesome pallor. It Is perfectly white the aid refused veteran The Easton with the clearness of perfect health. In in recruiters of marine corps regular HE SL'RE WAS SICK. sunshine no flaw appears In It. strong exand , a his quest-fsubstitute, It Her hair Is as black as night. George Sidney, the actor,, tells a the desire to "go it alone on Is piled on her head in great pressed shining for a he which confesses story, parsome formasses. One fancies if his own account." tunate accident it shouldbybreak from ticular fondness, on one of the players its hairpin moorings it would fall to of his company in his Bizzy Izzy days. HOME GARHE.V MOVEMENT. her ankles. Nls was friend are various angles from which "My There addicted hopelessly Her mouth not a Cupid's bow. Tt to his to the home garden work, which praise Mr. "and says cups." Sidney, of has firmness, decision and strength that can not be learned teaches things we could say to him ever inside a classroom. character. It is a mouth that might nothing that The youth gets the He acvery well be associated with the char- seemed to reform him much. But some- Joy of "seeing things grow." acter of a soldier's wife. for times we could get him on Ihe wagon quires a capital counter-irritafor a couple of months, till temptation the supposedly artificial atmosphere of Her Eyea Are Mexico. too strong, and he'd go back to the apartment house."-- He comes into But her eyes are her most Impressive came his sins with a terrible bump. touch with the laws of nature, the are black and and feature. They big we "Once had him of living things, the creative or sober four for pulse a A flashing. midnight pool reflecting five months, so that when he went on forces. He works In good, wholesome single star might describe each one. his spree it hit a lot harder than usual. earth. He learns something of where Her eyes are Mexico. Look into them He disappeared just after the perfor- sion of the tin can, hermetically sealed, and you hear tinkling guitars on moon- mance, came Intb the slon of the in can. hermetically sealed, and when In see men You serapes nights.in lightwomen theatre the next day he was lying germ proof, wax paper school of houseand black mantillas kneeling across the floor of room. hold economy. at twilight mass. You glimuse a dressingand was moaning andmy Many of us must live In cities, and groaning, from a latticed balcony aHeminute leaning or the I two thought I'd have for to living in them does not bring half adto drop a rose to her ca'aller strum- send for a doctor. farm" to the "back the evils that a shadin mandolin the ming fragrant But "I lifted him up, however, and car- vocates would have us believe. ows beneath. to in live him ried difficult we "You're cities make Inside, the feeling pretty of all Her eyes nre all the these that holdby not doing the things the world. They are all beauty the romance sick, old man. arent ou?" I said sym- home children are doing pathetically. f garden of the tropics. ' 'Klflr Conrna Ul.tj-- ' "rfv... M, our feet on the ground and keep"Do you believe in suffrage for Mex- sands ing have died who were not as sick ing in touch with mother earth. New ican women?" Senora Obregon was as i am now. York Press. asked. indanapoits .News. "No." was the prompt answer. "I do not disbelieve In it for American women, but 1 hardly think Mexican women are ready for it. Mexican women have their own problems. Suffrage SS WOMAX Is not yet one of them. Perhaps some want the vote. I cannot ! day we may GUN SHOOTS women Imagine our gentle Spanish for the ballot as the Anglo-Saxo- n fightingwomen ito do. It Is their natures. They are contrary bred gently New York. May Mrs. Kathryn M. and nurtured. However, one never can Stanton, F. McMillan whose husoanrl, turn the of tell what the wheel will Stanton, is an officer of several women have plenty gan corporations capitalized atMichibring. Our Mexican Some milof fire and spirit. too, lions of dollars, has announced that day men." they, may fight for equality with she has aided personally and financialThe Mexican Woman Problem. ly In the perfection of a war gun "What are the present problems of which: 1. Has been tested in model form Mexican women?" s t$o "To make their homes beautiful and with marvelous results by generals In States army. to make their husbands the2. United attractive, Uses no powder, chemicals or to rear their children to be fine happy, men and women." discharge. springs for.anitseffective range of seven "Is not that the duty f women or 3. Hasmiles. eight everywhere?" 4. Shoots out eggs or glass balls but it Is peculiarly the I "Perhaps, without Tj women of breaking them In the disof the problem races. They are raised with Spanish such a charge. 5. Shoots out fifty balls instantly different point of view regardvastlyman ball every hour. ing races than that of the women of or 6.oneCan wreck trenches," vessels or the of northern climes. Men are to them superior creatures. That Is aeroplanes. 7. Has no barrel.. Its shackles bind us Spanish tradition. men 8. Can be operated by one wom.an. are our superiWhether elosely. 9. Can plant fifty balls within a ors or net, they are at least stronger. at a range cf a mile Their position In the social scale is radiusa of sixasfeet h A was actually done with half, of our protectors. They make the and that a smaller model at Fort Hamilton and home for us. We beautify it." Hook. "You believe in the home woman In Sandy 10. Can be placed on the grass and contradistinction to the woman who fired I without recoil. takes part in public affairs?" I x ' 1 f4 ; I 11. AVeighs about 300 pounds. "Yes. Both, I suppose, have their i i 3 I ..4':: 12. be J Can In Places duplicated the world. But to me. simply, " I as I have been In Latin tradition, bred the quickly and comparatively inexpenV borne appeals as the more attractive. sively. 13. Hurls missiles from a flat surOf course, attractiveness Is not all In life. But the home woman seems to face. 14. May drive other sorts of guns v me the more womanly woman, the one : M aw J who approaches more nearlv the out15.of Isexistence. 3 I world's Ideal of a weman. the one who Beautiful named by its Inventor "The fits more harmoniously into a woman's "The gunKathryn.,call It a gun: I call natural sphere." It a thing isthey cf really the Mr. Stanton. nald harnessing motion." centrifugal FARTHEST NORTH RAILROAD. "The power can be generated by any A railroad Is projected for Finnish sort of engine. About So per cent of In order to make available the power Lapland generated is used. We tried deposits of Iron ore In that region. a. small model at Fort Hamilton and The first portion to be buiU. if the Sandy Hook, using an electric motor scheme materializes. will be of less than At a robably MHS. KATHUVX M. STAXTOX. from the village of Ilovanieml. con- range of 500 yards nected by rail already with the port of were hurled Into a circle about theballs size Kemi. on the gulf of Bothnia, and of the top of that table. (Fie Indicated trajectory, but It can be used with a n Sukuvaara. eighty-sevemiles distant. a table having a radius of about two flat trajectory. From Sukuvaara further extensions of feet.) The gun is exactly accurate, "The is not principle of the gunsome the line may be built to the mouth of except as the ball is subject to exter- new; it was tried by Ilussia time the Nelda river, on the Arctic ocean, nal influences, as soon as the range is ago. But. a the used experimenters whence Finland would be enabled to determined. The velocity of the ball rel and this spoiled the weapon's baracbefore It Is released governs its range. curacy. export Iron ore all the year round. Eleven miles of this link would be This velocity is determined automati"It is the most the thing inAlso, In Norwegian The total cally. The release is a part of the gun. world, because it practical is so simple. territory. of the line, which would be one a range cf seven or it is foolproof. It wears, longer and Is "We for length hope of the farthest north - In the world, eight miles, but it will not pierce ar- far less expensive than the powder-usin- g be 2S0 miles. American mor plate at that distance. Its pringuns. It does not require specipal use, I think, will be with a high cial machinery for its manufacture." ar ' 1 5 .." : i Electrification of railroad, like the of atmospheric nitrogen for production and explosives, is suspended fertilizers in the Cnlted States pending the enactlaws ment bv Congress cf general which will makewater possible the developpower in larxe ment of cheap lines of units. That Is to nay. thee as to lodevelopment are dormant, save where, electricity can be pru-dcalitiesmore fd cheaply by (team than by water power. The hlfch price of coal, the excessive crusade cost of operation and a general the moke nuisance has created against electrically operated the demand for of elecbut the substitution railroads, is being held tric for steam locomotives existback In many localities becausewill not such that capital ing law arevater power development undertake terms and restrictions. UndT their the Chicago. Milwaurecently Only completed the kee & St 1'aulofrailway 440 miles of its main electrification and Montana, Milline between Ilarlowton. the Idaho. Thiscrosses portion of Avery, the main waukee railroad and emRocky mountains range ofthetheheaviest on the Mibraces grades equipped with lwaukee system. It is3000 horsepower electric locomotives of find Is operated by power purchaseda. company, from the Montana Power title to Its company which acquired federal govern-mepower sites before the entered upon the policy of withdrawing power sites from ervtry. System KtpandlnK. Western railroad The Norfolk & over Us mountain r.auls heavy trains locomoradcs with fiOOO horsepower tives and finds that twoin electric loco-to efficiency motive are equivalent steam compound enthe three Malletused. As this road Is formerly the locomotives gines become now operated the down grade, generatdynamos onfrom the motion of the deing power train and returning to the pending trolley a considerable portion overhead ??f the current used In climbing- the The most extensive Inmain lineUnitedv the electrification or In the world thus far. is that States, & Hartof the New York New Haven ford railroad, which has electrified uptrack leading wards of York mtles of Into New 10f City and Is operating electric locomotives and more than lesser number- - of multiple slightly untt cars. The road's electrification Includes its Harlem division freight the largest In vards. which are among Inmotor equipment its the world, and d ensrines for passencludes ger service, heavy engines for freight atid express service and slow engines for switching service. Is I he power for electrical service generated from this (v steam plant at Stamford. Conn. t The operation of the West Jersey & between Seashore railway Philadelphia Is from and Atlantic City by electricity Is also current generated by steam, asPennsyl-v.uila the electrified division of the N. railroad from Newark. J., to' New York, through the Hudson river tunnel. Power for the operation of the Crund Trunk trains through the tun-r.under the river at Detroit, Mich.. Is sold to the railroad by the local , . power company. Water Power Vhnodant. The experience of the Milwaukee and of th" Norfolk & Western railroads has demonstrated the superiority of electric motive power over steam, paron the mountain grades. It ticularly Is In the mountainous country that water power is most abundant and In between th Missouri river that region and the Pacific ocean, where the heaviest grades are found and where also may be rievclopd the greatest quantity of cheap water power, coal is most expensive. the Interstate statistics gathered by commerce commission disclose that bethe Missouri river the cost of yond iiel for locomotives amounts to from 12.7 to 1 Z.3 per cent of the total opereast expense, on the roads of the ating cost is much lower. 6.9 per the coal rent on the Pennsylvania and 7.5 on The water powers the Illinois Central. coal Is scarce and of tho west. wher have a relaexpnslve. consequently value for this potential higher tively rise than they otherwise would possess and the demind for their development for transportation uses in the does not development greater, but because of the lack of proper power development on frogre. th public domain. Water power, to be utilized In transportation, must be developed In large li " - rail-urg- hlsh-spee- el ELL-A- W Absolutely Removes Indigestion. Onepackage proves it 25c at all druggists. c ' . V v- - - ' S ' u' nt ' ; V - t : - c J : ? ifs V ... . :: : ' ;' ' ' . ' g corps-recruitin- J) able-bodie- ar 3f ARIA TAPIS OnREGOX. or and developed cheaply. The quantities late K. H. Harriman, shortlv before he riled, thought he saw great possibilIn ities the substitution of electricity for steam on the Union Pacific system and particularly on the Sierra grades. IIrrlman' Discovery When he had made surveys and estimates he found that while, bv electhe Union Pacific through the trifying he could save from $350,000 to Sierras, $375,000 a year In fuel costs, this saving would be fully absorbed by the interest Investment charges on the large of capital necessary to make the from steam to electricity and change to develop the water powers, which the to railroad do Itself. proposed - The Union Pacific has never been electrified. But the Milwaukee, crossing a country where water power is beingto cheaply developed and can be sold the railroad at low rates by a power company, found It a good business venture to discard steam on its mountain divisions, and the success of the first experiment Justified the adopas motive power for tion of electricity the full length of the mountain run. of It Cheap water power and and opportunity to develop plenty this power under favorable circumstances are abelecsolutely essential in order that may be substituted for steam as tricity motive power on the railroads, east or This Is true because wet. cost of of the steadilyessentially diminishing steam turby generating electricity bines. The turbine of today uses 20 per cent less coal than did the steam the engine of fifteen years ago and uncost of installing steam has plants A, dergone an even greater reduction. turbine-drive- n unit today costs, to install, about $12 engine-driveper kilowatt, n while the cost of the units of fifteen years ago cost $26.60. Pecause of the heavy costs of in stallation and because of the ever diminishing cost of steamto plants water power development, successfully compete with steam, must be cheap and must be in large units. EOOO-kilow- att AUSTRIANS SHELL ELBA Capital of Island on Which Xapolean Was Prisoner Bombarded by Teuton Submarine. Tlerlln, May 2S, wireless to Sayvllle. Bombardment of Torto Ferrajo, cap! tal of the island of Elba, In the Med Iterranean, by an Austrian submarine Is reported in a statement Issued by the Austro-Hungarla- admiralty. May n 26 The announcement says: submarine on the morning of May 23 very successfully ahelled Important blast furnaces at Porto Ferrajo. on the Island of Elba The fire, of the land battery was with out effect. "The submarine later sank the Ital ian steamer Washington." Porto Ferrajo Is situated on the north side of the Island of Klba. On a height overlooking the town Is the villa of San Martino. in which Napoleon was confined from May, 1S14, to February, "An Austro-Hunijarla- n 1S15. Iloyds shipping agency on May 23 the sinking of the Washingreported ton. The nationality of the Washington was not given at the time and it was generally believed that the vessel was the British steamship of that name having sl tonnage of SOSO gross. The Italian boat was built at Glasgow in 1SS0 and was 2S19 tons gross. She was 232 feet long and 33 feet beam. SOMHTIilXG SEW,' The Tady Didn't I hear you quote Omar Khayyam just now? The Broker I think not. Tn fact, I don't think I ever heard of the stock. Boston Transcript. nt v T se-nor- ita ! SPONSOR FOR BAKRE LLE SEVEN MILES THAT . ; YT7 rA . ?xi, two-oun- SCHOOLBOYS TO RECEIVE TRAINING IN MODERN MILITARY AMP AT MANZANITA s virf :vy .' I CO. 1 'so CENTS Iwii rJ I B 45 27a 274 196 1 I Ha I & w $ PiJJPi ESTABLISH! DlftV PRINCI-pa- n 1 1 DINWOODEY'S " "GKn FIRMTLRE -- 4 Fahrni ... .1,000 Fahrni . . . 1,000 500 Stanley (latnmctte. ('. Oammette. 500 W. .1. W. J . 4 i vsv '.oNr-- J V v Av.-- . 'V f. l of business, Bingham Canyon. Utah.placeLocation of American Fork canyon. Utah. mines, There is delinquent upon the following described stock on account of assessment No. Hi, levied on the 17th day of March. 1916. the several amounts set the names of the respective opposite hareholders as follows: No. of No. Cf?rt. Name. Amt. Shares. 161 Joseph p. Bogdan .1,000 $2.73 267 KU Chnrlch .1.000 41 ness of the twenty-sevent- h general conference before 'the final adjournment tomorrow. The bishops consecrated and the stations to which they have been assigned are: Herbert Welch, Seoul, Korea: Thomas Nicholson, Chicago; Adna Wripht Leonard, San Francisco; Matthew S. Simpson Hughes, Portland, Ore.; Will iam Fiazjamcs Oldham, Buenos Ayres; Charles Bayard Mitchell, St. Paid, A' and Franklin Hamilton. Pittshi'vh. The missionary bishops are Ebe-Samuel Johnson, Africa, and Alexander Priestley Camphor, the only negro chosen to the episcopacy this session, Africa. The conference is characterized by the delegates as one of the most Important ever held, principally because of the plans adopted which, it is believed, will lead to the unification of Methodist churches within four years and perhaps Divorced Wife of Howard Gould by 1918. The conference has placed the church record as favoring renewed effort in Charged Conspiracy to De- - on the foreign and home missionary field and has systematized the management prive Her of Dower Rights. of both these branches. Plans have been adopted for the purpose of correlating appeals of the various New York, May 28. Mrs. Howard the financial A revised ritual is to take the boards. Gould is entitled to d of the place of the form of service which has procee.ds from property in Fifth ave- been in effect for many years. The nue soldunder foreclosure proceedings missionary episcopacy, which some delsought to eliminate, has been rewhich she alleged were Instituted by egates tained. her husband and his brother, George J. Efforts are to be made to get a Gould, to deprive her cf- her' dower $10,000,000 pension fund within the next four yeirs for retired clergy and their right in the property, it was learned widows. ' today, according to a belief of a refThe conference has taken an aderee appointed by the supreme court. vanced stand on several questions. Mr. and Mrs. Gould were legally sep- Members of the church were urged to arated in September, 1909, eleven years the liquor traffic. A new secafter their marriage. She received against tion of the discipline will ask that $3000 a month alimony and also claimed members refrain from the use of tod a bacco. interest In the avenue real estate. Because herFifth Suffrage was indorsed and polygamy husband denounced. Efforts to . remove the failed to pay one month's interest on a tax lien of $54,069 held by George "amusement clause" from the discipline Gould, the latter began foreclosure again failed and members are still liaproceedings. Mrs. Gould protested and ble to orexpulsion if they play cards, insisted there was a conspiracy to de- dance attend the theatres." Ministers who officiate at the marfraud her of her share in the property which she said was worth $800,000. riage of divorced persons now are made Under the foreclosure the court per- answerable to their conference for an mitted the sale, and the property was act of maladministration. Previously there was no penalty. bought by a realty company for $513 000. The referee reports that after IXTERNATIOXAL CITY. paying all charges against the real esthe plans la're in full operation When tate there remains $421,451, to d of which Mrs. Gould is entitled for the government of Tangier, Moroc"the first really international city The money is to be invested and the co, the will have of world," the community income paid to her. Upon her death it a legislative body, an assembly chosen will revert to Mr. Gould or his es- by popular vote and composed of tate. Moroccan members and eleven foreigners, representatives of the powers. A mixed court is provided for. TWO XEBHASKANs HHOW.V. the lines of the international Lincoln, Neb.. May 2S. Two deaths along In Egypt. The arrangement is court by drowning marked the opening of that It is to consist of two Frenchthe swimming season here today The men, one of whom will preside; two victims: Arthur Sorensnn iq giTk and one Spaniards, Atwo Englishmen to be public German. Spaniard is The war, of course, may prosecutor. 1. S. VICE COXSUI, DIES. the permanently. program upset Peking, May 29. Charles P American Vice consul at Go to Lagoon Decoration das. Fare Chung King, died Sunday from small- 2F cents, commencing 1 p. m. Adverpox. tisement. - MRS. GOULD WINS PROPERTY FIGHT -- one-thir- - one-thir- -- one-thir- twen-tv-fo- , Mc-Kiern- : an. - "The SUlffl pn 111 01 Will be told by James H. "Wallis, adjudicator in the "Clean Town" contests for the State of Utah, in the June number of The New West Magazine. Tliis article should be read by every resident of Utah. It will give him a thrill of pride that he lives in Utah, and at the same time it will awaken him to some of his responsibilities as a citizen. 1 Sonic excerpts from Mr. Wallis's article: "If every battle for supremacy between, towns in this state were as salubrious in its effects as the for one would say, 'Let 'cm fight.' clean-tow- n battles, I "Without doubt no state in the Union, size and opportunity considered, has done more than Utah in the matter of getting pure water supplies. Statistics show this state to have a greater percentage of municipal water systems than any other state. " "Employees in food factories, canneries, restaurants, etc., should be required by legislation to produce health certificates. Utah, like almost ever- - other state, lacks this protection. Is it asking too much to require a baker apptying for employment to show his certificate of good health, or to demand the same of a girl dipping chocolates or packing crackers in cartons f Would not our hotel and restaurant service be more satisfactory if we were? certain the hands of cooks and waiters were free from disease; that they carried no bacteria." "Utah is, so far, the only state in the Union to make a affair, operated ofcampaign for cleaner towns a state-wid- e state a ficially by department." If you want to preserve your health, preserve the health of your family and learn why people from other states are look-in- g toward Utah, read Mr. Wallis's article, and then you may say with him in his closing paragraph: "Utah is a healthful place to live. I believe it can be truth- fully said there is no more healthful place in the world." 75 75 3 Stanley ... 500 1.3S Martha Hair 1.37 26s Martha Hair 2. 5 ...1.000 2h0 Martha Hair 2.75 ...1.000 . . .2,000, 20s Chas. Hoemer 5 . :o lo.", Josenli Jones . . .1.000 2.75 . . .1.000 lu6 Joseph Jones 2.75 I a. s.-- 5 2.000 Jones Joseph S . . .2,000 Jose ih Jones 5.50 . . .5.0 00 13.75 2ti') Joseph Jones 261 . . .5.000 13.75 Joseph Jones 251 . . .4.000 Chas. Johns 11.00 25- -' . . Chas. Johns .5.000 13.75 276 Chas. Johns .6.000 16.50 And in the law and an order of the boardwith of directors on the 17th of Man h. 1916, so many shures of day each parcel of su;h stock as may be iiewesary will be scbl at public auction at the office of tie company, No. 3 Carr Fork. Blngha n Canyon. Vtah. on the 1st day of Jute. 1916. at 5 o'clock t. m . to pay the delinquent assessment therein, together with the cost of advertising and xpnse of Sale. MAX GLFFEN, Secretary. The June number of The New West Magazine will publish the article in full six pages. Send in your order now. Single copy, 15 cents. ,A whole year for $1.50. Address 1 1 zrrarl TTXfw an-ordanc- 1 - San Francisco schoolboys at training camp at Manzanita, Cal. San Fratu A training' camp exclusively for the schoolboys of San Francisco and the bay cities has b'en formed at Manxauita, near here. Th purpose of this camp Is to teach boys the military life. It Is umier the i.-- o, May direction of Major Watson okthe Poly High scnool of this city. The boya are taken to the camp and koPt thero for weeks, being in the details of military fife, drills every day and goiny through to -- ce Bluffman I owe you $10, old chap can you cuanise a iu our: Hanks Certainly! .r. er since you re so ltiuiiman flush. I gues I won t pay you till next week. Boston Transcript. nELIXQlE.T NOTICE. SMUGGLER MINING X. Y., May 28 Seven new bishops nnd two SARATOGA SPRINGS, of the Methodist Episcopal church were consecrated this afternoon at an impressive service, which Aas almost the last important busi- j -- gzgP . " HIS IILITF CALLED. tyt'j Seven New Bishops Consecrated as Last ' Act of Conference leading the lives of real soldiers for two weeks. After their fortnight of instruction is over they return to their homes and are followed by a group from another school. This movrmeiu is a part of the nation-wide preparedness campaign. 1 ta wsl mm Tel. Was. 3347. Night Was. 6531. 1211 Walker Bank Bldg. Salt Lake City, Utah. Established 1910. Robert W. Spangler, Publisher. s ur |