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Show THE THE SALT HERALD Tbe UKE a fsmall way by everyone with substantial REPUBLICAN -- Republican (Eat. Feb. 12. 1906.) Tbe Salt Lake Herald (KsU June 6. 1870.) 50 MAIN STREET. Inter-Mounta- in n PubPublished by the company II. . Btii, president; lishing A. L. Thomas, vice president; Edward E. Jenkins, treasurer; AUolph Anderbon, secretary. K. ir. Calllster, General Manager. Arthur J. Drown. Editor. Herald-Republica- - Associated with THE AUDIT BUREAU CIRCULATIONS. circulation Information concerning will be supplied through this association, Venetian Building, Chicago. Only Republican dally newspaper In Salt Lake City. Utah. DAILY AND SUNDAY, deUvered by carrier In Salt Lake City, on week, 15 rents; Sunday only, 6 cents. One DAILY AND BUND AY, by mall month. 75 cents; one year, 8.00. SUNDAY by mall (in advance) One year, J2.C0. Is not reTHE unsolicited for manuscript any sponsible which Is not plainly marked with the name and address of the sender and accompanied by atamps for return. HERALD-REPUBLICA- HERALD-REPUBLICA- N simiay, jim: is. joia. results. A moderate degree of success can be achieved without one's possessing any special genius. If he has just average capacity and will imitate the methods of the captains of industry, he can win his way. The foundations of Hill's success were laid in years of quiet obscurity, when he was only a stevedore and clerk for a packet company operating on the Mississippi river. During those years of humble work Hill had a reputation as merely a talker. But he was keeping his eyes open. He spent his life on the wharves talking with anyone who knew anything about river transportation. In time he came to a thorough comprehension of the actual conditions surrounding these enterprises. When ho started in business for himself he understood in every detail the conditions he had to deal with. Here is revealed the lack of most people in the business world. They look for success through sudden turns of fortune and are too impatient of slow processes of growth. Instead of acquiring the last detail of information about a business as Hill did. they wait for some unexpected stroke of luck to turn up. The man who wins in any trade is the man who knows its operations from the ground up. After that he must have organizing capacity. But thorough information is the first secret of success, as a career like Hill's shows. PARTY Suffragist leaders find a Democratic national convention its that more promising than a Demohope DKMOCHATIC lure to its President and a Democratic Concratic Progressives may standard evidently takes no account of the gress, but that's all promising. essential fact that a Democratic national REPORTING A CONVENTION platform no longer means anything. It may accurately represent party faith at is the dream of every "cub" newsthe moment ot its adoption but it is sub- ITpaper reporter that some day he will ject to change without notice and there- be assigned to report a national political fore valueless: are the bigconvention. These convention gest news events togatherings national A Kepublican be covered in Ameradopt5 in its platform only those princi- ican life. A PLEDGE-BREAKIN- G ples in which it believes and which poses to write into legislation if it proThe task of covering one of these hisgiven toric meetings is not just what the "cub" jower. The Kepublican party rejects such reporter or the public thinks it is. The ptoposed planks as it disapproves, pre fer- newspaper reader may suppose that the ine to court the opposition of their au- staff-writsits in his reserved seat eagerthors rather than promise what it docs ly scratching down with a pencil stub what not mean to fulfill. The Democracy finds the orators are saying, but actualh he may er it much simpler to promise anything and everything anybody asks it to promise, then to ignore the pledge when the hour comes for fulfillment. The latest Democratic national platform means nothing, because that party ha3 demonstrated a platform is only something to get office on but not to stand on afterwards. A Democratic platform is not a program. That party's declaration of faith four years ago endorsed the single presidential term and pledged the nominee of the convention to abide by it. That pledge has been repudiated. It endorsed remission of tolls to American coastwise ships passing through the Panama canal, yet one of the party's firts acts after taking control was to repeal the law which granted free tolls. Bat its most conspicuous failure to redeem a platform pledge is its indifference to the promise that American citizen should be protected on land and sea. wherever they might go. It is the punishment of the pledge-breakthat future pledges aTe not viewed with respect. The Democratic party finds itself undergoing that penalty. It broke faith with the people and the people will not again place trust in it. Every time a Progressive leader comes out for Hughes the President Is Riven renewed cause for regret that he didn't !tick to that one-terplank in the Baltimore ptatforrn. er m not be in the convention hall much of the time. The Associated Press gets all the public will read of the speeches. It is for the reporter to keep close to the real centers of action. Any active man could go to a national convention and pick up all the gossip that could be telegraphed his paper. The hotels are full of houters whose business it is to feed out publicity by the yard to anyone who will listen, particularly newspaper men. Where journalistic skill comes in is in being able to weigh this matter at its real value. Covering a national convention adequately- involves a wide personal acquaintance with the leaders of political life. The reporter must be able to gain their ear in this crowded and tense moment of conflict and turmoil. Ten words from a man who is helping pull the real strings i3 worth more to the reporter and his readers than columns that an untrained writer could pick up around the headquarters. This shows what an intangible thing good newspaper" work really is. To the public the real information and mere "hot air" look about alike. But if one reads the dispatches carefully, and notes the outcome, be will see that the trained man made shrewd forecasts of the situation, while the others were simply using the guesses of outsiders. SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH, SUNDAY, JUNE 18, 1916. N, 4 1 t SALT LAKE IN BRIEF well-design- ericanism WE CITY BREVITIES TEMPERATURE. Degrees. . .. 96 Highest . .. 92 1874. since In month this Highest ... 101 Lowest .' .. . 32 Democratic "Women to Mee- t- The Wood-ro- Lowest this month since 1874 .... 80 Mean Wilson club, composed of a number of Normaltemperature . . 69 meet with Mrs. John Democratic women,-wllCent. Per HUMIDITY. Griffin. 289 K street, on Thursday. S. R. Relative humidity at '6 a. ni ',. 31 .". 21 Thurman, F. S. Richards and B. W. Menden-ha- ll Relative humidity at 6 p. m a PRECIPITATION. Inches, musical prowill make addresses and r hours ending gram will be given under the direction of Total for the twenty-fou: w l at Mrs. Tom D. Fitt. acceptance. Scandinavian Celebration. The midsummer celebration will be held at Wandamere next Friday. It promises to be one of the most successful affairs ever given by the society. A program of field sports has been arranged and a between the Danes and the Norwegians Is on the program. Ilible Teacher to Meet The workers' conference of the First Presbyterian Sunday school will be held In the church Monday evening at 8 o'clock. This will be the last meeting before the summer adjournment of the Sunday school, and all teachers are urged to attend the meeting. Scot to Celebrate. Wednesday, June 21, the Salt Lake Scottish club will hold Its annual gathering at Wandamere park, where the day and evening will be spent in the ancient games and customs of Scotland. Lodge to Hold Review. A review will be held by Banner lodge No. 11, Maccabees, at 2 o'clock Tuesday afternoon, June 20. This will be followed by memorial services at 3 o'clock, to which all Maccabees and friends are invited. farewell testiFarewell Testimonial..-monial will be held at the Twenty-nint- h ward chapel Friday evening, June 23, for Francis Newman, who will depart soon on a mission to the Hawaiian islands. Bishop Wilford W. Emery will be among the speakers. Ward to Hold Reunion- - A reunion of the Waterloo ward will be held at 7.30 p. m. Friday, June 23, and 2 p. m. Saturday, June 24, at the ward amusement .hall. All interested in Waterloo ward'are invited. Following a program the first day a banquet will be served and amusements for the young folks will be features of the second day. All over 16 years of age are invited the first day and all under 16 are invited the second day. C. S. Jones, Will Return with wife his and three charged abandoning minor children In Salt Lake, is to be returned e, for trial from Duluth. Minn. John B. chief deputy sheriff, left Saturday with requisition papers to bring Jones back. Inheritance Tax FalL Checks for inheritance frbm foreign estates amounting to $3073.60 were received by General Albert R, Barnes. One Attorney check was ' for $2947.90 from the estate of Edward Stleglltz of New York, holding 400 shares of Union Pacific common stock, while another check was for $125.70 from the estate of James A. 100 shares of Parsons of Boston, Union Pacific commonholding stock. Former Senator Cannon Here Former United States Senator Frank J. Cannon, who is allied with the National Reform league, an Danish-Ncrwegi- tug-of-w- an ar A ns .21 COURT NOTES I Bur-bidg- with In Pittsburgh, organization is visiting relativesheadquarters m the city. Mr. Cannon expects to remain here a week anti-Morm- on before going east. Pocatello Man Visit Here. II. B. Williams of Pocatello, Ida., who was a delegate to the recent convention at Detroit, Mich., of the Brotherhood of Trainmen, paid a visit, at the State Railway Capitol to his uncle Joseph Kimball, connected with the state fish and game department. Admit Insurance Companies. John James, state insurance commissioner, has oA- initted the Western Life & Casualty company oi uenver ana tne sareguard Fire Insurance company of New York to do business in Utah. Seek Missing Couple. Messages were received In Salt Lake seeking information about Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Pickens, who were last heard from in Salt Lake on July 17, 1915. The inquiry was made by relatives Herman G. Kiel, 543 Kenyon street, through N. W, Washington, D. C. The occupation of Mr. Pickens is given as that of carpenter and ed m G Y THE GENEALOGIST. (held at) New London, Conn., June n. p. n. d. 60 i 7. ls , 53-6- 4, con-tinuab- . 1500-184- 8. 1623-162- 5. 1606-167- 2. LOCAL. JACOB VAN VALKEXm RG. Jacob Van Valkenburg, aged 79 years, a harnessmaker, died yesterday at his residence, Fourteenth South and Second West. He is survived by a widow and two daughters, Mrs. L. A. Cassity of Salt Lake and Mrs. A, L. Ricine of Alameda, CaL CARL JOIIAX PETTERSSOX. Carl Johan Pettersson, aged 64 years, died yesterday at the family residence, 643 Brixon avenue. Funeral services will be held at 3 o'clock Tuesday afternoon at the Swedish Lutheran church. Fourth East and Second South. 1754-1823- ' " 1, 23-7- NATI0N CHARLES M. HOPPER. Ashtabula, O., June 17. Charles M. Hopper of "Chlmmie Fadden" fame, died in Ashtabula general hospital at midnight from shock, following a severe operation performed Thursday. Mr. Hopper was for several years a popular stage favorite, reaching the zenith of his career in "Chimmie Fadden." He abandoned the footlights some years ago and had been living in retirement at his summer home at Unionvllle. He was a son of the late Charles Hopper, Standard Oil magnate. d, . GENERAL. 1600-167- WALTER E. HOFFSIAY, ELKO. Walter E. Hoffman, formerly employed in the local United States land office, died last week In Elko, Nev. He was thirty-seve- n years of age and came to Utah from St; Paul, Minn. The body was sent to his home in that city for funeral services and interment. 1708-176- 7. MARRIAGE LICENSES. : , one-sid- Mc-Cow- an, d Lake. Olaf E. Nordberg, San Francisco, and Lola Newhouse. Butterbaugh, and LuAmega T. McNulty, Portland, Or.,....... cille Holder, Salt Lake. Theodore Bossard and Louise Landberg, Salt Lake. h Richard L. Hickej-- , Denver,, Colo., and II. Graehl, Salt Lake. Elof L. Peterson. Salt Lake, and Julia M. Hansen, Murray. J. Henry Sorensen and Luella M. Johnston, Salt Lake. Otto Miller, Sparks, Nev., and Marie Shin-ne- 872-38- 3, . . Zil-la- . y, Ogden. 1 REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS. ' Ashton-Jenkin- s company to Carl A. .$ Badger, 5, 2, Yale Park Add InvestGeorge E. Gull to Bruneau-IIil- l ment company, part Felt's Sub. C. O. Johnson to George S. Lemaich, part section 25. 2 S, 1 W. Waldemar Van Cott to Covey Investment company, part 3, 14, D..'. .... ... A. W. Peterson to Dan Muir, part 5, I 10 10 70-7- 1, i 500 10 to-Lan- d 13, Francis Newman to William J. Newman, part section 35. 1 N 1 W T. A. Moore to George A. Moore, parts 132 A .4 7, 10 d 1 1000 Eliz A. Gould to A. G. Aubrej--, 10, .. . Garden City A 10 WEEKLY HEALTH REPORT. The weekly report of the city board of health shows that seventy-fiv- e births occurred during the week, as against forty-fiv- e for the same period' last year. There were reported twenty-tw- o deaths for the week, while for the corresponding period of 1915, twenty were recorded. Of the 20S cases of contagious and infectious diseases reported, 5 53 were measles. Other cases were classified as follows: Scarlet fever, fourteen; whooping cough, eleven; chicken pox, twenty-sevediphtheria, two, and typhoid fever, one. 13-1- 4, - n; , CLEARING HOUSE. ', 10 ; Investment company Extension company, part 18, plat A ll $1,653,137.38 Saturdays clearings ... . ......... Same day last year 9S4.958.65 Week's clearings 8,853.949.89 Same week last year.. 6,380,076.38 , Ogden-Presto- . 6-- 4. . John J. Shireman, Salt. Lake, and Abbie Patterson, Omaha, Neb. George V. Allen, Salt Lake, and Mary N. Heffernan, Burlington, Vt. Walter F. Rose and Grate E. Kelly, Salt e 51 2 Mil-for- five-acr- le , DEATH EOLL. 26, B 30, 1915. p. pi. por. 8o. Roberts Genealogy. The coats of arms of the Roberts family. By George C(astor) Martin. Asbury Park, N. J., Martin & Allardyee, 1915. 12 p. por. 12o. Alexander genealogy. Alexander family Robinson Genealogy. Ancestry and posterrecords. An account of the first American set- ity of Georgy McCook Robinson. By Doane X tlers and colonial families of the name of Robinson. Pierre, S. D., 1914. Chart. Rocefeller Genealogy. (Family tree of the Alexander, and other genealogical and his- descendants Drawn of Diell Rockefeller.) matenew and original torical data, mostly and Rockefeller, by O(scar) Henry arranged rial, including early wills and marriages here- Brooklyn, N. Y., 1912. Chart. Price $1.50. tofore unpublished. By William Montgom- Address the author, 152 Jerome st., Brooklyn, York, W. M. Clexnens, pub- N. Y. ery) Clemens, 20New 8o. 1914. Rockefeller Genealogy. (Family tree of p. lisher, descendants of John Peter Rockefeller.) the of Andersons Anderson genealogy. The Gold Mine, Hanover county, Virginia. By Ed- Drawn and arranged by Henry O(scar) Chart. ward Lowell Anderson. (Cincinnati, Ohio, Rockefeller, Brooklyn. N. Y.. 1914. Price $1.50. Address the author, 152 Jerome 1913.) 30 p., So. Brooklyn, N. Y. Rilling genealogy. John Shaw Billings,M.a st., Rockwell Genealogy. Eleven centuries of memoir. By Fielding H(udson) Garrison, D. New York and London, The Knickerbocker the remote ancestry of the Rockwell family. By Donald Shumway Rockwell, editor, BerkePress, 1915. 9x4?2 p. pi. por. 8o. of the prepared ley, Cal., the Gillick Publishing Co, 1914. family, Billings Genealogy (17) p. por. 12o. Edited from the manuby the late Mrs. John S. Billings, p. famscripts of Ada Bell Trowbridge Petersen. Cnrr genealogy. The American Carr Scovlll Genealogy. A survey of tne Sco-viilies. Compiled from the works of several Martin or Scovills in England and. America; 700 authors. Frankford, Philadelphia, Pa., 10 p. 12o. Price $1. Ad& Allardyee, 1912. of history and genealogy. By Homer years dress Martin & Allardyee, Frankford, Phila- Worthington Bralnard. Hartford, privately delphia, Pa. printed, 1915. 586, p. fesm. geneal. tab. map Chase genealogy. The Chase Chronicle, por. 8o. Price $6.50. vol. 6, mo. 5. Boston, January, 1916, p. Seelye Genealogy. The Seelye Centennial. il. 8o. Address J. F. Chase, 159 Devonshire Paper read by Hon. Alfred Seelye Roe at the street, Boston, Mass. celebration of the 100th anniversary of the Cowden nnd GilHIand genealogy. An illus- Seelye family in this' (Washington) county, trated historical and biographical sketch of (N. Y.), August 28, 1915. n. p. 1915. 9 p. 8o. the descendants of William cowaen, wno miShearer Genealogy. The Shearer-Aker- s about 1730, family combined with the Bryan line, through grated from Ireland to America and of James Gilliland, who came from the the seventh generation, arranged to be same land, and about the same time, includa as both indefinately, genealogy a ing a system of charts connecting each memIn and each of the three picture gallery ber with the ancestors of the family. Spe- lines, by blank pages inserted In the last four cial, mention also of those who participated and index on which new names in the wars for the independence of the col- generations and may be Inserted at their proper pictures onies and for the preservation of the union. places. By Rev. Dr. James William Shearer. t United i By Robert Cowden. Dayton, Ohio, 179 N. Somervllle, J., press of the Somerset Mes i Brethren Publishing House, 1915. Ad1915. 171 8o. Price $4. p. por. senger, i geneal. tab. il. pi. por. So. Price $2. dress 113 Grove St., Somervllle, Address the author, 18 Hershey street, Day- N. J. the author,. ton, Ohio. Stout Genealogy. The Stout family of Del- - 0 senior, Samuel Craig, Craig genealogy. awre; with the story of Penlope Stout. By pioneer to Western Pennsylvania, and his de- Thomas Hale Streets, Philadelphia, Pa,, 1915. scendants. By Jane Maria Craig. Greensburg, 107 p. So. Price $1.75. Address the pub143 1915. Pa., printed for private circulation, p. fesm. por. 8o. Address J. Craig Giffen, New lisher, Thomas H. Streets, Wyncote, Pa. Talbot Genealogy. Lineage of the Talbot Alexandria, Pa. from Le Sire Talbot, 1066, to and Infamily A Walloon family De Forest genealogy. Peter Talbot of Dorchester, and Rogin America; Lockwood de Forest and his cluding er Talbot of Boston, Mass. Also the lineage de W. Robert Mrs. By borbears, of the Talbots of Bashall and Earls of Forest. Together with a voyage to Guana de Forest and his Shrewsbury. By Arehie Lee Talbot. Wilton, being the Journal of Jesse and New York, Me., J. W. Nelson, 1914. 66x(l) p. 8o. Boston colonists, Tnppan-Toppn- n Miffin Co., 1914. Vols. published by Houghton, Genealogy. Tappen-Top-pa- n 1 and 2. 21x314; 9x391 p. fesm. il. map. pi. ancestors and descendants of genealogy; Abraham Toppan of Newbury, Mass., por. 8o. of By Daniel Langdon Tappan. Flint genealogy. A genealogical register Thomas printed by the compiler. Arlington,Privately Mass., the descendants in a direct line of as 1915. (4)xl64 p. fesm. pi. por. So. Flint to Capt. Benjamin Flint II.(339) incomthe Stone Treasevant Genealogy. The Trezevant fampiled by John Flint and John dethe and 1860, Andover edition, published in the United States, from the date of the ily (819). By Nelson arrival of Daniel Trezevant, Huguenot, at 4 scendants of Cheney Flint and Robert F. Flint. - N. p. 1915. 17 p. pL Charles Town, S. C, in 1685, to tho present por. 8o. date. By John Tlmothee Trezevant. ColumFox bia, S. C, Fox genealogy. The genealogy of the printed for J. T. Trezevant, by the ). State Co., 1914, 122 p. fesm, 8o. family (descendants of John Fox, Fox. Chicago, priBy William A(lmarion) Vanderpoel Genealogy. Genealogy of the R. Donnelley & Sons Co.), Vanderpoel vately printed4o.(R. family; with items of personal, '. ' 1915, p. and social interest. By George Bur-rl- tt political famGoodrich genealogy. The Goodrich New York, Charles Francis (and Press,Vanderpoel. 1912. ily. By S(ebastian) V(isscher) Talcott 19, p. fesm. geneal. tab. City, il. pi. por. 8o. Goodrich). New York George Alexander piormnffoil onr! till blishefl by Martin & Allar Watter Genealogy. The Watters family. dyee. 1912. 30 p. 12o. Price $1. Address Mar- - By. Dennis Alonzo Watters. Portland, Ore., & tin Allardyee, JtTanKiora, rniinaoiyuj, 1915- 22 p. pi. por. 8o. Hall genealogy. Genealogy ofM.theD., Hall Webb Genenlogy. William Webb, SeptemO(akley) Hall, family. By Omar ber 19, 1746; September 23. 1832, his war serSo. 12 1914. p. 111., from Long Island and. Connecticut. Anvice the of family found An account will be and descendants. By Capt. R(ichard) cestry who lived of William Hall and Andrew Allen,Westchester Greene, A. M.. LI. B. New York, H(enry) now Chappaqua, at North Castle, John C. Hassel, 1914. 93 p. fesm, of press county, New York. tab. pi. por. 8o. geneal. Harrison Genealogy. The royal ancestry Wlllard Genealogy. Wlllard genealogy, seBy of George Leib Harrison of Philadelphia. to memoir. Materials gathered Wlllard quel by William Welsh Harrison, LL. D., edited for Wlllard and Charles Wilkes by chiefly Joseph M. Mervine, Philadelphia, printed, William Edited and completed by Charles Walker. only, 1914. (5)xl22 p. Henry Pope. Boston, private circulation Mass., printed for the 4o. fesm, geneal. tab. pi. por. Willard Family association; 1915. 8x768 p. ancestor: an Jewett Geanealogy. Hunting fesm. pi. por. 8o. The Jewett and a study in genealogy. Williams Genealogy. Ancestry of Law By Matthews ancestry and collateral lines. 1914. rence Williams. Part. 1. Ancestry of his Des Moines, la., George Anson Jewett, Simeon Breed Williams, descendant of father, (25) p. pi. por. 4o. Williams of Newbury and Haverhill, John Lamont Genealogy. A brief account of Mass., Part 2. i Ancestry of his the life at Charlotteville of Thomas William Cornelia Johnston, descendant of mother, a' Lamont and of his family; together with Thomas Johnston of Boston, Mass., in By record of his ancestors, of their origin Cornelia Bartow Williams. Chicago, priScotland, and of their first coming to Amerivately printed, 1915. 291 p. fesm. geneal. tab. By Thomas Lamont, New pi. por. 8o. Price $15, limited edition. ca about 1750. AdYork, Duffield & Co., 1915. 6xl33x(2) p. 8o. dress the author, 1362 Astor at., Chicago, HL McClure Genealogy. The McClure family. Wylie Genealogy. Historical data concernthe Wylie and approximately one hundred By James AlexanderA. McClure,1914.Petersburg, ing 2x232 p. related Owen, Va., presses of F. family names. By Ernest Gray Wylie. Des Moines, la., J915. Chart. pi. por. 8o. The appendix contains an account of the Chart with index on and brief Alexander. Baxter, Bumgardner, Mitchel, statements regarding ;the various families Gilkeson, In the ancestry on the other side. Pilson, Draper, Ingles, Wallace famHumphreys, Steele, Tate-anGenealogy and. Eugenics. Study of human ilies. can be greatly increased in value if lineage Maclean Genealogy. The family of Mac- illuminated by genetics. Methors to be fol- V manuscript entitled, a lowed. Results 'to be, expected. By Paul t lean, edited from the account of the family of Popenoe. Washington, D. C- - 1915. p. brief genealogical in the island 4o. Reprinted from the Journal of Hered- i Maclean, from its first settling 'r of Mull, and parts adjacent, in the year 1716, ity, vol. 6, no. 8. ! now in the Advocates' librarj', Edinburgh. By John Patterson Maclean, Toronto, the MacCONGBESSIONAL SUMMAETi j lean Publishing Co., Ltd., 1915, 29 p. pi. So. Major Genealogy. The Majors and their '. SENATE. marriages, with collateral accounts of the Not in session; meets at noon Monday, allied familes of Aston, Ballard, Christian, Dancy, Hartwell, Hubbard, Macon, Marable, et ;'"T-MHOUSE. : Mason, Patterson, Piersey, Seawell, Stephens, ' CaBranch at 11 a. m. Waddill, and others. By James Passed $158,000,000 annual pension- 'approbell, Richmond, Va., the W. C. Hill Printing 188 p. So. Price $2.50, Roxbury Co.. 1915. bill. priation $3.50, . Judiciary committee; deferred Burlington edition. Address action on edition; James B. Cabell, Dumbarton Grange, Dum- impeachment charges against Federal At. barton Va. torney Marshall at New York until Monday. n Adjourned at 4.50 p. ra. until 11 a, m. genealOgden Genealogy. descendants of and ancestors The Monday. Capt. ogy. Benjamin Stratton Ogden and his wife, Nancy FISH FROZEN ALIVE. By Josie Powell Stone (Preston) Ogden. and William Ogden Powell. St. Peter. Minn-Pre- ss The feat of freezing live fish and reviewof the St. Peter Herald, 1914. 31 p. 8o. ing them several weeks or months later has M. Page Genealogy. Page rescent, line of been achieved by the? Swiss scientist, live descent from Nicholas Page of England to Pictet. The scientist put twenty-eigh- t Charles Lawrence Peirson of Boston. Second fish in a box that contained water rich in. edition. By Gen. Charles Lawrence Peirson, oxygen, in which several pieces of ice floated. Salem. Mass., the Salem Press Co., 1915. (15) The temperature of the water was then reduced slowly until it froze. At the enJ of p. il. 12o. A me- about two months the cake was gradually Pnlne Genealogy. My ancestors. thawed, and the fish,' it Jls" said, were found morial of John Paine arid Mary Ann May of alive. In such an experiment, the scientist By Lyman May East Woodstock, Conn. it is essential that the waterj be reports, 1914. Paine, Printed for private circulation, gradually frozen, and. that it shall have con240 p. fesm. geneal. tab. II. pi. por 4o. of ice for from fifteen; to notes tained pieces Perkins Genealogy. Genealogical before the whole mass is hours eighteen concerning the .Perkins, Taylor and allied frozen. The process, of thawing must also be families. By William Titcomb Perkins, Saco,' slow. Through this process it is believed 35 p. pi. Me, the Streatter Press, 1914, that Siberian sturgeon and Alaskan salmon por. 8o. can be exported alive to distant markets. Terkin Genealogy. The Perkins family In CAN YOU SPEAK THEM? ye olden times. The contents of a series of letters. By the late Mansfield Farkyns. Editof the languages the Bible has been Some ed and privately printed by D(avid) W. Per- translated into are Accra, Aneityum, Arra-wac11. 88 p. map 8o. kins, Utica N. Y., D.1916. Azerbijan, Bulu; Calmuc, Chippe-wayaW. Perkins, Utica, N. Y. Price $1. Address Coptic, Dajak, ,Dikele, Puffer Genealogy. Descendants of George Gitano, Gujerati, Haussa, Iaian,Eromanga, Ilocano, Wor- Khassi, Kinika, Koorwlsh, Kusaien, Puffer of Braintree, Mass., Lepcha, By Charles Nutt, A. B. Lifu, Malagasy, Maliseet, Mandingo, Micmac, cester, Mass., 1915. Price $7.50. Address the Mpongwe, Muskogee, Namacqua, Narrinyerl, 376 p. por. So. author, 7 Monroe ave., Worcester, Mass. Ojibwa, Otiyeherero. Parapanga, Pangassinan, The Reynolds Family Pushtoo, Rarotengan, Ruk, Scheetswa, Reynold Genealogy. annual reunion Tcheremlsslan, Tchuwash, TschI, WoguL association, twenty-fourt- h 397-40- Frank Conley, who conducted a rooming house over the Merchants bank, was discharged from bankruptcy in the United States district court. Walter Birk, a miner of Bingham canyon, filed a petition in bankruptcy acknowledging debts of $425.26 and claiming assets of $2030, of which $2000 on a life insurance policy is exempt. The case of Bruce E.. Terry, who filed papers In bankruptcy proceedings back in 1905, but who never finished the case, and who a year ago filed another petition in bankruptcy, was taken under advisement by the court. Terry's creditors have objected to his onbeing the a discharge from bankruptcy granted last case until the first case has been completed. If the court grants him a discharge on1 the petition of 905, Terry will .have., to wait six years before he can be discharged from the more recent case. Mattle E. Brown filed suit for divorce from William A. Brown, charging habitual drunkenness and nonsupport. Erma C. Beers filed suit for divorce from Frank E. Beers on the ground of nonsupport. David Barr, charged with a statutory offense, and Lewis Papovitch, charged with burglary, entered pleas of not guilty when arraigned before Judge C. W. Morse in district court. Marie Crager filed suit for-- divorce from Charles W. Crager, alleging drunkenness and failure to provide and asking $15 per month alimony. Bruneau-Hi- t C . Wife-desert- er. pro-pra- suz'-Tcstio- 0 Total for this month to East. Orson Ryan, Total precipitation sinca date..., .7.87 January 1. school ALMANAC. Jordan of the district, superintendent Sun rises at 4.55 a. m.; sun sets at 8.02 will deliver an address on "Field Day In the EducaJune 19, 1916. m., National p. before the Rural Schools" meets this which tion association convention, 1 He received the invitayear In New York. convention and wired his I I tion to address the et I p. m 6 .School Official Invited tugs-of-wa- v GENE ALO NEW BOOKS FOR are glad to present to our readers this QUNDAY and Mondaypartly cloudy; cooler; i3 the forecast, issued last night by KJ the local weather bureau. list or genealogical works just off the The following comparative data for Salt press, and suggest that all Interested shall 4 r Lake is Issued by the weather bureau of write to the authors or publishers for the the United States department of agriculture: same: If President Wilson knows that hyphenated-Am- j Is "trying to levy a is announced that the United States species of political blackmail." as stated In ITtreasury will soon issue new designs in his Wet Point speech, he admits his derelic- I tion of duty In not crushing it Instead of place of the present stvlc of dimes, quarters and half dollars. If they are no bet- promising to crush It. ter specimen than the buffalo nickel there VACATIONS FOR MOTHER will be little to be gained by the change. To most people one cei:rn for a coin SHE w as a practical housewife who. consented to go camping a is as good as another, provided it passes two for a summer vacation, pro- painter. week or a do have coins at the grocery store, but some nations good cook was taken along to I)anlh to Mnkei Merry A midsummer's viding real significance. For centuries celebration and picnic will be given at Lamembers famOther the do of the hiscooking. have used them to express their ideas, 23 by the Swedish Brotherhood June goon of mother's of had never given camp America and Norden lodge, Order of Vasa. part ily tory and great leaders. A mother a but had. The program of. exercises will include the and executed coin is a sign that the peo- life thought, need of recreation rest r. intelunwinding of a May pole, folk dances, of nation Everybody's are a it high behind ple, foot races for young and old and a was mother's. There was but recognized, of craftsmanship. ligence and development beauty contest. business the tedium of of wearied jHorly-dcsine- d coin father, a suggests Conversely State Buys Concrete Mixer. A new conthrough the long winter and the spring crete mixer to be used in the paving of W. a low development of the arts. The familiar designs of our present rush, all run down and sorely in need of Fourteenth South has been purchased by the ,it was announced by E. R. Morgan, silver coins would not probably strike a the revivification that comes only from state, road engineer. The mixer is of a new and munching the state and Is reported to be able to make contype typographical expert as very well done. "whipping the stream"mother packed all crete more rapidly than the ordinary mixer. Compared with those issued by Kuropean contents of the basket before. bait Little the the but seem night and I'oMttnlstren Appointed- - Advices received figures governments the lettering school all from Washington, out Sue sister and of D. C, announce the apshaded Johnny just rather eoare and blunt, too heavily of Miss Edith L. Cutler as postpointment and the with "zams" excruciating mistress at and lacking in clear cut definition. The fagged Cache Millville, Utah. Lincoln cent introduced a few years ago toil of ball games and tennis contests, just Miss Cutler succeeds Miraldacounty, reJesscp, was one example of a finely done coin. dying for an opportunity to do research signed. Richard Family Reunion --The regular The lettering for the words "one cent" is work in botany and geology and make up life free Ho! the book a for of reunion of the Richards family assobeautiannual and clear specimens. peculiarly veil rounded, will be held at Saltair Saturday aftciation outdoors. ful and would be hard to improve upon. June 24, and all members of the famernoon, AH that mother had to do these same The buffalo nickel had at lea.t one well are requested to be In attendance. ily Ilride-eledone feature, the Indian bead, a vigorous long weary months was the continuous Given Shower. A shower was and expressive drawing of this American round of housework, and what would camp given at Liberty park by women employees of the City and County building In honor of type. But the lettering was crowded down be without mother! Who else could scale Miss Nell Pollock, stenographer employed in fish fresh from the clean cook the and and coin had the a and to almost rough nothing office of the the street department.' who and bunchy appearance that made it look babbling brook papa catches with his hook Is to be married city to E. J. Faloon Wednesday that mamma fries in a pan and Johnny eats of this city. like some freak advertising medal. Will Banquet Governors. When the govLettering on coins that requires a mag- like a man, who gives Sue one and Johnny ernors of thirty states arrive in Salt Lake is take none to arThere mother? be but called read two, to may nifying glass 26 for their annual Convention, the first June ravletmeals for mother's place compounding tistic, but it spoils the design. Every event in their honor will be a dinner given ter or figure on the coin should be clear enous appetites whetted by the bracing air at 7.30 o'clock in the evening at the Commerand obvious, so that everyone who examines of the open; to wash and scour the kettles cial club, open to members of the club, their Lake. it can see just what ideas were meant to and pans; to make the beds nobody else guests and citizens oftoSalt Meet. The Daughters Woman' till out mother "breakSociety of tumbles says be conveyed. hold Pioneers will their the of closing meetto the and fast's peel potatoes ready"; season home the the at of the presiof Euto to ever ing Col. House is go ready stew the chicken for dinner, and repeat the dent, Mrs. John Q. Cannon, at the Cannon forcomes to a It leading rope, but when kettle and pan exercise; to bake the pies farm. Ninth West and Tenth South, beginlorn hope a? campaign chairman, well he and 3 p. m. Saturday, June 24. The dumplings and get a real meal ning atwill include the presentation of "The prefers to remain Mr. Wilson's close friend for make thewith another repeat on kettles Pi oncer Mother." supper, and advifer. and pans; to mend the frocks and trousers will Churrhnomrn to Merf A ONE SECRET OF SUCCESS torn by wild racing through brake and be given at the home of Mrs. kensington John F. Cowan of a man like James J. Hill, thorn, and pack the basket (all but the at 2.30 o'clock Wednesday afternoon by the women of the First Unitarian church. The THE career death has jut occurred, offers bait) for early morn. When the two annual picnic of the church will be glvenln to ambitious young men. weeks are gone mother comes back to town Emigration many canyon Saturday, June 24. success and who the rest with of the for fellows long goes family, right A meeting of might Aid Society Meet Monday Young the second section of the First Presbyterian well put into the study of such a life some on with her household work as before. Whether it be true or not that every- Ladies' Aid society will be held at 2.30 o'clock of the time they give to amusements. Not afternoon at the home of Mrs. II. J. can be a one in ten million people "Jim" body works Jnit father it is almost univer- Monday 69 R street. The first section will DIninny, Hill but the methods by which he became sally true that everybody gets a vacation meet with Mrs. G. S. Arnold, 735 Emerson avenue at the same hour. a great business leader can be imitated in but mother. NEW DESIGNS FOR COINS 3 i: ! i : k, n, 1639-191- 5. , |