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Show o THE SALT LAKE TKJliUN'K, PIE WEDNESDAY MORNING, Rotarians and Kiwanians Favor Water Bonds IF BEETS n tr n n n MARCH 10. 10. JCNIS, top, who la from district mnangor st Boise to division manager of the Mountain State Telephone 4 Telegraph company at Salt Lake, covering th territory of Utah and Idaho. Bow, A. II. DeXlke, whose reelg au9Sffrom the telephone company waa announced yesterday. FKEir STATE REVENUES n n. Contest Is On for Commercial Club Members of Representatives Sugar Company and Farm reau Fix Scale. Assessed Valuation Is Too NTENSE competition between the Rotary end Xiwanii club member to decide which club can bring In the largest number of new Commercial club member 1 now on. Bom Beaaon of the Rotary club (left), Is shown rushing to get his new member, B. Eomeyn, Into the dub snd get credit before V. K. Richey of the Kiw&nis club (right), plsces his man, W, T. Denn, on the Commercisl club roster. Mr. Bomeyn Is s member of the Georg E. Merrill company, snd Mr.' Denn Is s member of the Hubbsrd-Dencompany. I mated Expenditures. . Fieaent prospects are that the assessed valuation of ths stats of Utah for 1930 will not exceed ths 169X000,000 fixed for 1919. . In making the estimates for the of ths stats for the current biennium. the state offtlcala used the figures corresponding to about 9736,000,000 for 1919 and about 3775,000,000 for 1930. ll The revenue of the etate from the tax, therefore, must full far short of the estimates presented to the lexis-l- a tu re. For thle reason the state board of equalisation will ask the governor and the state board of examiners for a conference. at- - which the situation as It now confronts the state may be explained to the officials in charge of the executive expenses of the state. At that meeting some line of procedure may fu-be formulated to govern the board s ture action. The main reason for the falling off In the stressed valuation of the state and the revenue as compared with the estimates Is the falling off In the net proA somewhat ceeds of mines. general survey of the situation Indicates that metal the assessed valuation of the mines this year will be aome 130.000, ooo less titan that of last year, which was Itself much lower than might have been expected from the record net proceeds of 1917. which were taxed In 1919. The assessed valuation of livestock this year will fall off about $4,000,000 on sheep and about 93,000,400 on cattle, from the figure of 1919. This Is because the valuation placed on range cattle has been dropped considerably below the figures for 1919. Sheep this year are assessed at 910 a head. Instead of 914. aiul cattle also are at a lower figure. In addition tha numbers of livestock have decreased. If anything, owing to the dry season of 1919. The natural growth In the state and other considerations will (n part offset these figures, according to preliminary reporta reaching the slate board, but it Is considered doubtful If the assessed valuation will go much over the total figurea for last year. In one Item it is known there will be some Increase. The board Is assessing coal mines this year the on a basis of actual tonnage In ground, and this move of Itself is exasto the add to 2.500,000 about pected sessed valuation of the state, in addition to whatever improvements in the coal mining industry have been Installed during the past year. Represent&tL es of the Utah-ldah- o Sugar company and the state farm bureau last niht reached an agreement m a ratio basis contract for the 1920 contract tor sugar beets and the appre hensions which existed tor a time that tne acreage might he cut this year were set at rest. The farm bureau represents & majority of the beet groweni of the state and their acceptance of the proposals of the sugar company is taken to mean that the die puts which has existed since last October has been definitely settled for 1920, with prospects for a banner year for sugar production. The agreenci.t reached last night te identical wlfii that reached between-thUieat Western Sugar company of ColoIt calls for ths rado and its gtofters. v guarantee previously made by the of us per ton for beets and In addition a rate of payment per ton for beets based on tne average seaboard price of sugar above $11 per hundred-poun- d sack. Extra Money for Beets. Under the terms of the agreement the farmers will receive a minimum of 912 per ton snd for every dollar per sack over $11 that sugar Is sold they will get $1 por ton extra for thetr beets. Thk, sliding scale bas.s Is conditioned by tiie company on a production of a minimum of 1, &oO.K0 bags during the o comseason. Last ear the pany produced 1,237,000 bags, the smallest produced by the company. In HD I it produced 1,750,000 bags. The output of two additional factories, that at Ie.tA and at Brigham City, will be Included in estimated the 1920 production, widen It will reach well over the 2,0u0.uw mark The company opetates plants at Oarland Brigham City. West Jordan, Lehi. Spanish Fork, layson, lHta and Elsinore, Utah. In speaking of the agreement last night President 1. 1. McKay of tne farm bureau said. While ti 0 conclusions reached apply onlv for this ear, they were arrived at After proonged deliberation and will be accepted by the farmers as satisfactory pending (he establishment of a complete and permanent ratio system of contracts. This agreement applies only to the o Htegar company territory, but negotiations are now pending with the other companies in the state and within a few days we expect to announce agreements with them. Utah-ldah- I Approval of the final report on the drainage project for Weber county, which ts proposed to reclaim 57.000 acres of land, at an approximate cost of 1. 750,000, has been made by Dr. Samuel Fortier of Berkeley, Cal., head of the government western drainage work, according to information which reached Salt Lake yesterday. The report was prepared bv K. A. llart, senior dividrainage engineer of the western and 8. G. Margetts, sion in Salt drainage engineer for the Utah Agricultural college. It is to be printed at once and will be distributed to all water psers in Weber county within the proposed drainage district. If the findings are accepted bv the land owners, thev will vote to create the district, which will be one of the given jesterday at a largest drainage districts in Utah. Farm Bureau Gets Busy. 'The growers have contended fur a ratio plan and in tne agreement reached iut night this feature is intituled. In conjunction wth the sugar com.mnies the Utah state farm bureau will begin at once to work out a contract for 1921 on the ratio plan.'1 z cil Mark Austin, agricultural superintendent for v c ugar company, last night said: As a result of our reaching a mutual agreement, the acreage planted to sugar beets in the state wli m doubt lx maThe successterially Increased this joa ful end to the negotiations aiao means wL that the growers ami manufacturer be working In harmony arid cooperation to secure the best possible results for the industry as a whole. This cooperation ls espe daily dexir Abie when It U considered that the sugar Industry of the intermountain country represents an investment on the part of the farmers and the manufacturers, about equally divided, of approximately $100,. hOo.uou, and distributes annually about 925 000,009. T.ie compan.v was represented in the conferences of Monday ami yesterday by Merrill Nlblev, assistant general man ager; David A. Binith, a director of the company, and Mr. Austin. The growers were represented bv the fo'lowng countv bureau ipfflcets. Cache, A. J. BergeJ-onBoxelder. Ephrtam Orover; Weber. James n. Bues; Davis, T. Waldron; tlcorge E Holt; Moigan. J. Salt iike. J. M. MoKeliar; Wasatch, Frederick Crook; Carbon, L. D. Hamblin; Sanpete. D X. Beal; 1). D. M Kav, presi dent, and Lee I. Taj lor, secretary. EKizssszsaa wviwvrvw. 1 - STA1 Agricultural Bureau Salt Lake -- M SAFETY SHOWN TO UTAH Industry. New-liou- We are sorry to lose Mr. DeNike,1 Mr. Reid said on his arrival here yesHe has been with the comterday. pany a long time and is valuable iu niore wav tliau one. .However, 1 understand his idea of trying to get into business. He would have to work hero a long time before he could start up a new telephone company, llo will it gives us an importunity though to promote deserving men and we are glad of that 'opportunity. Air. DeXike, Mr. Jones and I will to Boise tomorrow and will to work out the. line of sueces- sion. The vacant places are to be filled bv promotion from our own ranks. We shall exiect to make further announce- - meat later. We have no plan for any special improvements throughout this division, but we aim to keep improving all of the tune. As an illustration, our extension budget for the year of 19L0 is more than Other improve1,000,000. ments are on the same scale and we to expect keep on growing. Twenty Years in West. Mr. DeXike is a native of New York, but has been in the west for twenty years. He began working for the Uolo-rad- u of Denver Telephone company eighteen years ago ,n the contract deWhen he was lie Denver left partment. special representative to the vice president and general manager of the Mountain States Telephone 4c Telegraph company, into which the Colorado TeleHe phone company had been merged. hud worked in practically of cveryart the business before coming to Salt ConLake eight years ago.. Woman Sustains Slight I have been in the telephone business for the last eighteen years, said cussion of Brain When Mr. DeNike, and it was not an easy matter for me to make the change. I have been considering the propositTou Machines Crash. for several months. These are trying times in the public utility business, but there is a fascination in telephone work Mrs. John X. Schick? lisl KUison street that appeals to rue. My associates here sustained a severe laceration on her head . aJld eigewliere jn tl)e en)p,ov of tl)0 eora and a s ight concussion of the brain, at i panv i,ave bePn ttnj are f tjle ficsfr o'clock last night when an automobile I to lie fouuil. driven by Paul II. Bradlry, 20 years of I Mr. Jones has been in tho telephone ears. From age, 415 South West Temple street, business for twenty-fou- r she was riding HH)2 to 1911 he was construction engi-lcrashed into the I neor at Third South and Main streets and general manager for the Utah Mrs. Shirk was accompanied by her I nltpeD d( ut Telephone with ' . company, . was i au'.oniowho their husband, driving i 6 19,1 In tho Brad-- I vI?Uq, bile north on ytate street. V L open district manager lev automobile were Bradiey and his par- - I ent. Mr. and Mrs Juhn C. McClain, 415 'or the Mountain Htates Telephone & Xewhouse hotel. The machine drhen b Telegraph company iu IdahoT with head Bradley was traveling south on State I quarters in Boise. street and the accident occurred when li II turnci east Rt the Intersection to cross r T'1 A V DAVPOe a THREE HURT IH nia-hln- -- : f Idaho, with headquarters in Boise, will succeed Mr. DeXike as division general manager. A successor for Mr. Jones ha not yet been decided upon, but F. H. Reid of Denver, general manager for the company, said yesterday that one would be selected either from the headquarters in Boise or the headquarters in Halt Lake, unardjruue baLot the Salt Lake 1STICS Kotarj' and Kiwanls clubs, assemsession of the .Salt Lake t bled yesterday the Hotel Utah FILMS and Klwanis cluls held at MINE at luncheon, voted in .favor of the Hotel Itah showed that so IN BE Chief proposed water lKnl $sue of $3 far the Rotary club was in the 300,000. following an appeal for s ipport lead in scouting memberships for the the city made by C. dnrrme Nesleti The Anaconda Copper Mining comin to SurThe Hubs not oa'j voted commission, club. James W. Col, ins, panys tllmx, Hhowlng safety practice In Commercial of Charles motion their mipport, but, upon mines at Butte nrt l,i the smelters presidt rt of the Rotary club, presided and Its Anaconda Tynge the Rotary club decided to appoint will be brought to Utah at bea committee of five to stimulate inter st vey urged Increased effort In tho gontest later this month, according to an anIn favor of the bond issue tin- - two clubs. tween made nouncement jesterday by Carl A. With the aid of statistics and illusthe noon at Allen, chief Inspector of mine for the inTomorrow trations, Commissioner Nemcn explained of Utah. commission dustrial A. Jones, chief of the fi hi service why Salt Lake should prepare tor the hotil, the Rotary club will meet Mr. Allen, who Is also district engifuture bv having nn adetjuate water sup- of the bureau of wdl tatlsttcs and neer for the United States bureau of erop estimates, United with the Kiwans cub, He described the pait a ply eastern. with the practices water system plats in developing a coin- - States department of agriculture is "in again he announced. The grand finish mines. IsIn familiar the big Montana properties. rnunlty, and declared no city could grow KaIt Lal;(1 lo lneft with will he made ithown Saturday evening, adopted will be shown late films He says that the representative beyond its aater supply. club will treat the March or earlf the following month I'm felling ou,' Mr Xeien continued. stockmen and officials of livestock as- after which the losing at the Commercial in and at some of the smelters. In Halt winners to a banquet 'that Halt lake City lias been operating These are the finest underground on a very close margin and on veiv thin sociations for the purpose of obtaiuiiiK chili at 7 o'clock Allen Mr. said, that have been Ice At present the water suppiy depends more accurate estimates of livestock clifiirman of the Rotary Rohs Colorado Growers Accept. taken in the west, and the Industrial entirely on the few mountain streams near production and probable markets. club commU'eC for the campaign, called commission for as many perte anxious IllxvrXVlC. the path of vehicles going north. AA bpeolfl! to The Tribtn. Ills subehairmen and the report showed sons ns by, and even some of these streams are A third machine, driven by A. S. Erick-- I poss ble to have an opportunity club f r the Commercial It is tho ami of the bureau, Mr. Oil VI AIAA PDCHITC 109 momheis DENVER Marcn 9. Ti e Colorado beet not utilized. The totcl storage capacity 1 iJ them. 161 I In of had been son, seeing street, hslrman the) stopped H V. is fiOu.OflO.ooo Richey. only gallons, Jones said, to make the livestock a ready obtained. today accepted the proposals of at present of the Intersection to allow Mr. center said teat chib is while the (omrmttee, Klwams average of daily Western consumption which the tie (beat Sugar company, wit-- 1 wno Mr. to Schick as accurate asked Erickson, is and as our In. pass. LAST DATE nessed the accident, said. I saw tho au- - Information regarding income tax re- present crop complete report, weie not of call for the payment of a bonus on the about 30.000,000 gallons, far in excess of report the Combeets delivered this year on a sliding the supply. estimate. Estimates made for the war Nathaniel Jaok.on, secretary total tomobile occupied by Mr. and Mrs. Schl k I t.ur8 ?n Stock dividends was receivednumber the The principal supply depends on the department and food administration CAST com club, to mercial give scale depending upon the market price as north on titare street and I Mtoppea I JMteraav by D. L. Dunbar, m a telextreams flowing into the City and the earlY as on f'le, which was forty of re lined sugar. the beet growers to realready February dunntr the war were my car to allow them the right of way, II graphic dispatch from Washington, The The two clubs are wot king oil di'ferent ceive a dollar ptn ton more than the $12 mow and rain falling nn the present limand found Evan composer after the harvest to be within plans. The Kotar eluh asks every Professor Stephens, Evidently mv car, standing as it did, oh- - message stated that a detailed letter in ited watersheds. In other states, espebasis for every nolitr per hundred-poun- d direr tor of Tne Vision," the cantata strutted Bradley's view of the approach-- 1 regard to stock dividend return has one metnher for the Comto cially tn Michigan, the water question i 2 per cent of the exact figure of foodsack that sugar sells for above $1L conpresented at the April ing Schick machine, because he did not I been mailed from Washington. The mercial rluh, while the Ki'vams club is which will be tiie The farmers organization withdrew its solved, an it means onlv the pumping of stuffs av ailahle. L. D. 8 church, anference of de, pause put passed me on the left groups of two. me s,atr f nil The big buyers of livestock spend working In Fevjuest to its membership that they hold water from the sourceon of supply, but in that nounced the other automobile directly In telegraphic Saturday night 2.7 at yesterday Halt the It stream Lake flow, much time and jesterday' About weie present depends out for tue contra t suggested by the Claims for credit against first in- in well on money which last date keeping J were the he singers Mu-the middle. wi sehctions and the inluncheon supply given Inadequate. present some fo farmers the yime aan and left informed as to th probable marked try the Rotari in quartet, cons'stipg of will be admitted to the cast. More than The sudden stopping of the automobile stallment (March 5) ou account of dividual Inrmefrn to a ent the company's Last winter the snowfall was not heavy from the luiver's 200 female voltes have been procured, threw Mr. Schick to the pavement. 1 tax paid in prior Tears on stock and although the recent two point of view. Surely a vtd A Smith, Alred Res Drms, whicn most of them will do, ac- enough,snowfall will women be held J and practice for the in The mountains has not it is wise tor the stockmen to keep as Haynes arid put her In my machine and dends mav be accepted, but must not R'piT days cording to reports current here Friday evening at 7 :30 o'clock In the took her to the emergency hospital." be permitted to reduce payment of In connection with the settlement of yet been measured, it looks as if a similar well informed of supply and markets It building. confronts the condition Bishops this eight stitches to close the March L installment, unless claim on year. required city from the seller's viewpoint. the contract problem for the 1920 crop MAY 150 more male voices are needed, wound in Mis. Schicks head. About a After the water not been re47-of sugar beets it was said here today on Last year, hadentire menis filed, setting forth full would rather Many livestock and all men wishing to take part are short rest she was removed to her home. Form the supply would have vnimreacnable authority that the farmers stricted, ACTION a half dozen steers of dividends received and taxes out brand details and mens FACE the chorus to- meet with go 15. of asked was A the accident exhausted made been report by August police g fire looking forward to a builda lines thereon four the on of Katurda and n statement of all have made a than write paid evening at Bishops report by patrolman Joseph Nete. Department officials acreage and to most favorable con-tiWalter Clark, 6 years of age. 329 South details of any subsequent sale of shares' thorough study and have visited all sur- conditions of the industry iu which RixuJ of lard ooiiirnis.oneri. ing. state Tin ions for a large crop. Sundae afternoon following the taber- Third Last slreet, was knocked down by received as a stock dividend and unless and they are vitally interested. They should throug i its secrotarj. Arthur Kuhn, The settlement of the contract problem rounding sources of water supply, been both choruses will meet an auto at Eleventh Kart and Sherman claim is has sent a ommmu' ation to Han H. nacle servicestn the so far a regards the growers for, the they areIn confident a solution for their own good get over that. by statements of reached all the water for avenue yesterday aiternoon and sustained from the accompanied which utl'tzatlon Bishop s building. the practice him arm attornev ral, ia re&t Western company, the largest re well Shields, bureau The requesting already distributed organ corporations encan near hand. be done at This a concussion the ano brain of In by slight su as h rourt action to take lineis in the state, eliminates an uncernight reservior at Mountain Lell, ized with regard to livestock through deem was taken to the emergency dividends ns to amount distributed to the He bruises. larging Johi to neeesar to as Ririe, ph 1920 compel the tainty sugar production Pat leys canyon, and building additional out the central west, but here, in the a warrant on the hospital and later removed to his home. taxpayer and yeafs in, which profit diswhi h has existed s;me last winter. state auditor, to Max Eisner. 17 vears of age, a messentributed were earned. Letter follows. storage plants in Cottonwood can von and range country, the problems are some- requisition of the I mil !ard for the purENLARGED other places where Justified p conserve what different. Ww have been assured, chase ger. waa injured last night at Third South of the town of Orem bonds. After UTAH-IDAHthe water which at present runs to waste. however, atreet an when Main and v PAY automobile as of in reciting the history of the case, of heart TO Such storage wi.l forever solve the L. O Bingham, who ha been traffic struek him whhe he was riding his C. E. the request saJU' It will provide for a Wyoming and Colorado, and are looking record, for the northern half of the state bicycle. Ho was taken to the emergency chief BONUS water question is it Tn of respectthe foretmlng. in other western similar for support population of 500, Mrt. Telephone & hospital by Karl Lund and J. Morgan. that, if jmi are of the for the Mountain states The water in Strawbenv vallev his states. I shnll spend some davs in Utah fully requested has had his terriAfter receiving treatment for skin abrathat the purchase of said bonds Telegraph company, The Sugar company yester-L- y been adjudged unfit for culinary purposes. going into the matter of Inw the bu- - opinion to include ail of Utah. sion on his hands he was taken to .his of the law tory enlarged the Charlps E. Wood hag tendered his rescomes juthin purMe.v announced that it wl',1 pay tha $1 per s it contains organic j and th read can serve tho livestock interests governing the lit' of land grant Mr Bingham willarrived in Salt Iake last home, 720 Fouth Fourth East street. ignation as a patrolman of the 8a!t ton bonus on beets delivered Jat vear to pense and to fit it for Fie have his headquarters neces.-ar-y hardsijnecesaary night. Lake to cause officials. livestock wlt(, take police department to become manfunds. Jou ,)r()mient steps sold 1919 the grower who beet to ue Is Impractical, but th pr8ent plan, their here, Instead of Ogden, where he has ager of the Salt Lake branch offlcS of the sta'e auditor to horn r the requisition been. tha reat Basin Fuar company, provid- if realized, xxljl tnt onlv bring pure water, FEDERAL RECOGNITION s William h the J. Burns International draw anil warrant board of this ing the growers plant an equal acreage but cold water and ample for everjr need. ARMY PLANS I dont know whether I am being Detective agency. The resignation . beo thi jear for the comps Action Is needed now for outside priGIVEN or not, said Mr. Bingham last OFFICERS promoted came effective Mondaj'. which ha purchased the Great Basin comvate interest may come Jn and fbe on "Mv territory has been extended SPEED night Mr. Wood announced yesterday that pany plant at Delta. the waste waters, which will caue a and that seems to be the size of it. As STORY ho would establish offices at 301 and 103 Federal of lias been be wtil bonus the recognition made e Payment The present shot-agerlous predicament. granted I understand it, I am not succeeding Tribune This will be IV. Thomas, first lieutenant, and the first building. A when the farmers have planted their parade over Salt Lake streets will of water I hindering the southern half of the Pelhert M of ACCIDENT ambody here as the been Burns agent v has ever eed. and wi.l be iven to them either tndustrj' The water ued by growth Taylor, secohd lieutenant. In tine thata the the Utah he held Saturday at noon to stimu'ate handled from George state has hitherto branch office T.aka. at Salt operated to camC of States in the capital stock of th company at Oil Kalt the Lakf Unitd assigned troop cavalry, srtny recruiting to be used the Salt Lake headquarters. Refining company ha Mr. Wood was a deputy sheriff for $10 per share, par value, or In caeh. as later The office of Lieutenant Colonel Fred seven Marie Montayn, 17 yearn of age, of Captain John P. Food of tne by the Oregon 8iort Line. In fact, paign. h S became a membefore year r local badlv swollen a will asserts there with station eve the farmers prefer, ft in the desire of the first has Jorgensen, adjutant general, aleo Linrecruiting named has b ght Magna, Scouts Support Fond. been advised that Herbert E Benger of ber of the police free recently. he several large caterpillar tractors, a and duty nrd disarranged clothing, who tne company to hae many farmers accept ked In Its water company supply. 54 West Third South street, this tire stock in order that they will become and An advisory council will he named to- number of huge army trucks, as well as arrived in ?alt Lake on the 10 ly n Hok Boy scout troop fil of the Twenty-thir- d city, James fh Reynolds of Monroe have been interested in the manufacturing phase of morrow, consisting of prominent busine the recruiting automobile and motorcycle Orem trAin, waa taken to the emergency ward of Halt Dancing has raised conturnout. from In Fort the industry as well as the the Richard N. M the of erection for , and Iatrolnan Morcorps. tribution discharged the will Bayard, men who by Beynon, hospital work and with and engineers, Saturdav mghta, Wednesday In and id cut to ho order Th Salt district has to raise a sin tinned at the depot, she had mon Battalion monument. J. A. phase, Whipple Barracks. Arix, respectively, as promote the most the commission. Among those who Murray. (Advertisement ) .10 oHo k cordial relations between the grower and will city At aeoutmaeter of the troop, called suffering total disability, due to illness. be named on the committee are .A. F. quota of more than 800 men before March been In an auto accident ..Mis refiners. The federal Inspection of C halterv of ift the evening, she told the officer, she local yesterday on D. E. - Hammond, Doremua, Lafayette Hancheit, W. R. 21. enlistments-Louirode with two other girls and three men scout executive, and- showed a receipt the guard, held at I'rovn Monday nfgh, Following are vesterdaj-Wallace, William Hpry and Joseph Decker John Kopp, east on the road from Magna to Mult for 910 which the twenty-fou- r M remarkable for two features, accordof t.eorges. Salt boy Nothing must stand in the wav of this GAIN DIVORCES Life and Character Reading the troop had raised. E ton Luke, in an automobile- that she bond issue, for without it t.ie city cannot Provo: Mose B. Williamson, ing to Colonel Jorgensen the suitability It purposes of tho new Provo armory to control and Twin 5he ear T. the Southern. 1ot lift Pals and confronted are with We Idaho, this driving probgrow. IN COURT lem and must prepare for the future. We James Hhamrell, Kansas City. Mo. and th excellence of th battery band. the road, striking a telephone pole, she Scout Conference Planned. MARCH 10. said. appeal to ail to assist, and the water comfield II. Dr. This birthdate Is governed by Jupiter John Taylor, of secretary Five Interlocutorv decree In of divorr Guard Morin Increase. mission asks for support the sharing Men's Mutual arid Neptune, two excellent planet the Young Improvement war granted yeaterdajr in the Third to He urged ail FloUrUn DR. T. O. resp4iihiiity and hrlpmg work out de- We want water. Word waa received yesterday at the he born under. association of th L. I. 8. 'churth, will court, Nona of tne artiona were tails. Nothing will he done except what to get back of the movement. marine a three Salt hold days class station of leadership law the recruiting contested mbnlltlng Jupiter, that great will lead to the glory of our great comsj President James W Coiling, who preDIVORCE at -- GRANTED Idaho, March 19, 20 and 21. the pay of men In th marine corps on order and system within si stem. Jud& V. f Eva nr accorded a decree to sided, said both Hubs were organized for All scout leader In th Teton stake will prison guard duty has recently been In- a lear mind, logical reasoning Imparts lE.eanor Ariee Romrey from Uneoln (j. munity. powers, lt Luke, snd ea. h Charles Tvng chairman of a committee the upbuilding of to The Increase tost h attend. creased. b ellgiule taken exactness, as well as Inventive and Ilomnev, on ground of rionaupport; to consisting of the Hcv. Eiirr I. Ooshn, hsd three films to grrompllsh Establish-mf- it Dr. T. O. Duckworth was granted n effect I as follows; Ealtallon sergeant hhortlno from H.rni ehortlno on loeon Htvet. track J. t.twtin and K f genius. of tn ample water sysem, the ridljlu in his divorce vesterdav suit filed majors,' first sergeant, mesa around of cruelty, and to Traffic Violators Arrested. People horn Under th1 planet make Anderson Schramm, appointed to mk a study of ding the Hty of the smoke nuisance and orant, Fdith rewill supply sergeant and sergeant re W. Andetaon ou ground of de- the quest on. sphniid dentists and pbjalclans, alao froo the putting over the Commercial Hub againstF. Tobin. L. Duckworth, bv Judge reported favorably on Com for Twenty-fiv- e arrest violato traffic an addition their ceive comto caiivaescr and collector. John regular the pay sertion. According mihsioner Nesn s plan, and (tinted out niemhrshp drive. tions were mad yesterday by the police. of 35 cent per da- J.nlre Tha birthvtoee is a moonstone. V. H. Rramel granted a decree some of the Corporals will ref water w ortp.ge Roturlan Jonn Bmcljr of focg. plaint. the couple were married in 19o4 Twenty-tw- o hardphif'S isiMi.g were of these for cents and 30 of violation ceive c tree conks, riectsicians helpers and railriwd firetn Oeorge H. McRrlde from Carrie A1 What we. want is water. Mr. Tyne at Fillmore, Utah. The divorce was section 12. which forbid the use of a I teJlo end J F Fcethtrstone of privates, prite3 flr-- t c.asj srd holes men and conductor will find tho Want o;i ground of desertion. a;.d wdTiont care what it cost. were introtL'ed granted on iharges of desertion. 20 cent a day extra. moi or fehiqle without propdr license. Ads la.oriiig thtm till month. BY i SN With Company Long Time. DRAINAGE PROJECT REPORT APPROVED Utah-ldah- Divition A. II. DeNike, division general man- - . ager for the Mountain State Telephone k Telegraph company, has resigned that position to become associated with Frank Botteriil in tho automobile business in Salt Lake. Mr. DeNiko is in charge of the western division of the telephone eompany, which comprises the states of Utah and Idaho. The resig- - , nation has been accepted and will go into effect April 1. Fred B. Jones, district manager for live-mi- com-pan- DeNike, Fred B. Jones, District Man ager for Idaho, Promoted to Salt Lake Office. rev-en- as Sugar Exceeds $11. H. A. General. Manager, Resign to Engage in Business. Low to Meet Fully Esti- n Contract Calls for $12 Per Ton, With $1 Increase B. q u s't . J s, wx ll SATURDAY TO JOIN CANTATA Fl lAlLIW 1 . au sec-ur- e S- 1 1 STATE AUDITOR COURT - record-breakin- brt - H i.-oi-e TO SUGAR BEET TELEPHONE OFFICIALS TERRITORY WOOD DIRECT DETECTIVE OFFICE O .. Utah-ldah- o x- n, Utah-ldah- TO PARADE RECRUITING TWO GIRL TELLS OF AUTO . Mod-tenee- n, s FIVE roc-o- ; DISTRICT . Gt DUCKWORTH ct Prig, M i - Iv-ga- A. i' ' I h |