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Show V WATSDfJ REVEALS U TelU of Murder of Ninth l 'OOD GOOD OOODS pur- chases which our buy era made and are still LOS ANGELES. Calif. May F. Wataon, under Ilf rcntenca for the murder bf Me wife, Nine Lee Deioney. who hu ronfeeatd to the murder of nine j of hie wlvee. le expected. It wee aald to- day, to begin eervtni Me sentence after Saturday. Wataon. In eonfeairtng to hav. In killed the ninth wife also related to the dietrlrt attorney his early life In the . middle vest. ,j He said he wee a eon of John Olllam, j a farmer supposed to be living now near I'arte, Kan. He eald he had been christened Joseph, but the first name he could remember being call4 wax Han Holden. He explained hta father and mother separated and he took the name of the man his mother later married. Watson or Holden declared he . ran away from borne when hta mother forbade him to go to Sunday school. lie worked on farms at Sarroxle and Monet, Ken., at Verona, Exeter and Neosho, Mo., ami Eureka Springs, Ark. He told the district attorney be traveled with a medicine show and later obtained a position with a mercantile agency He began a mercantile In Chicago. agency of his own and took ths name or Ins. father, John Olllam. Islng this name he waa married for the first time, hs said, seventeen years ago to Marie The of Coffevvllle, Kan. marriage was unhappy and they were divorced. He traveled through Texas. Oklahoma, Colorado, Kansas and Missouri for a St. Louis stamp and seal company, marrying olive Oreenlee end then divorcing her. He then married Alice Freeman ol HI. fouls st Alton 111. While conducting a. malt order business he was Indicted, hut before he could be arrested he went to Canada, he eald. It was In Moosejaw, Canada, he said, he took the name of Watson In 1912 and since then his activities were confined to western Canada and the Pacific coast ll.-Ja- mea making in the New York markets are ar press - -- t Come this afternoon for jour first lesson la Madam Coates School of Metric and Dressmaking, Conducted by Edith M. Trattlcs. ou'v personal representative of Madam Coates. Still plenty of time enroll. Mis Trattles will b In the classroom tt 3 p. ni. to answer all questions. (Third Floor.) J In E very Department m the Store Our Entire Stock of Thousands of Dollars Worth of Merchandise, With the Exceptions Mentioned Below P1 0 At the Request of Thousands , the Management of Walkers Has Consented to Continue , For the Remaining Four Days of This Week 20 states. The prisoner was visited today by one t his wives Mrs Williamson. Hlie gave him a tube of tooth paste, a tooth brush change, all, she was quoted Just exactly off on every piece of merchandise in our entire store, EXCEPT RESTRICTED MERCHANDISE . and GOODS ALREADY MARKED AT SALE- - PRICES in saying, she could afford to five him. The prisoner, who said he was christened Joseph Ulllam, Stic! that ho had taken the lumr of Han Holden, declared Mrs. Williamson was "the only one of ths many women with whom I have had to do v ho has had nothing to say against me." Hhe has borne with me in my Buffering, be continued. "Her memory wdll be my most valued possession throughout the years behind the prison walls." one-fift- h Discount, Please Remember: Our marked prices are not changed, but 20 per cent ducted at the time of purchase. is de- We ha vo continued this sale for four days longer at the urgent request of hundreds of our patrons who did not quite understand at first the magnitude of the event and its impor: ' , . tance to themselves. Population Figures WASHINGTON. May 11. -- Paterson, N. J., So, 866, Increase 10,266, or 8.2 per vent. Ottawa, Kan., S01S, Increase 1363, or 17.9 per cent. Hackensack. N. J., 17,667, Increase 3617, or 25.7 per cent. Mariborojgh. Maes., 15,017, Increase 423, or 8.0 per rent. Evansville. Ind., 83,264; Jamestown, N. T 38,898; Rlabee, Arl., S205; Temple, Texas, 11,032. Increases: Evansville, or 2 4 per cent; Jamestown. JJol. or .4.3 per cent; Blsbee, 186, or 2.1 per cent; Temple. 4u, or 0.4 per cent. Medford, Mass., 38,687. Increase or 7.1 per cent; Chicopee, Mass., :i.214. Increase 10,818, or 42.6 per cent; Sherman, Texas, 13,031, .increase 2619, or 81.1 per cent. Blue Island. 111., 10.328, Increase 2485, or 20.9 per cent. Butler. Pa., 23,773, increase 8.03, or 14.74 per cent. Fort Collins, Colo.. 8724. Increase 524, or 6.4 per cent. A f to supplement all lines. Or CLASS MEMBERS by riving alut 81. in In ML GOOD The great special Wife and Gives Story of Hit Life as Kansas Boy. 12. 10 ''rTV 20i ARLMREER ind MO UN' 1X0. MAY THE SALT LAKE THllIlXE. WK1XKMAY 1 ONE-FIFT- 7, art SeUraffher fabrics XJLand fine tailoring in clothes mean longer Longer wear means .fewer clothes to buy each year And fewer clothes to buy each year means money saved , B . ' Contributing Editor. Well Mi ' possible. HEARING SET FOR MAY 4. WASHINGTON. May 11. Hearings on RADICALS BU8Y. ths of ths railroad carriers HONOLULU. T. H.. May 11. Radicals for application rates in official southern are spreading Bolshevism In Japanese and increased western classification territories ararmy poets, and the government has were scheduled comrested leaders in the movement at Takata, merce commissionby the Interstate 24 in for today May a Japanese city In the prefecture of Washington. . Niigata, according to the Tokio correspondent of the Honolulu Pacific Commer-- i U. 6. MARSHAL FLYNN DIES. Further arrests are exOMAHA, May 11.' Succumbing to an pected, according to the dispatch. illness that had confined him to his bed for many weeks, Thomas J. Flynn, Unit(Continued From Fag One.) Our lawn seed is carefully selected and ed States marshal, died at his hom torecleaned; it incans a beautiful lawn ths night. Ths end had been expected and first season. Vogelers Heed Store, I Mr. Flynn himself was aware that hs nUuried In Paris in 1S62. For two year I could not survive. (Advertisement.) he wrote editorial for the New York Nation, the Times and the Tribune, and then moved to Boston, where as assistant editor he began his association with the Atlantic Monthly, succeeding James Russell Lowell as editor in XS72. At the age of 44 he retired to devote himself to his novels, which he produced for many years at the rate of two a year. wear H one-fift- 7. ALL-WOO- L ' s on everything they, When people began to realize just what it meant to save bought, and when they understood that the sale was absolutely as represented that Walker Brothers Dry Goods Company had just decided in taking the initiative in a radical h from the price, of every to deduct move to break the backbone of high prices article purchased for a limited period, the crowds kept coming mi greater numbers, and., phone calls and personal visitors besought the management to continue the sale a, little longer until they could make arrangements and plans to supply a3 many of their wants as Glad to Show You the Season's Newest Utah's Greatest Clothing Store. Adams Gardner Company When 50 years old, Mr. Howells found time to become contributing editor and later writer for the "Edltor'o Easy Chair department In Harpers Magazine. For a brief period he acted as editor of the Cosmopolitan. Dr. Howells he had received degrees from Tale. Harvard, Oxford and Columbia j universities, though he had never attended college was a keen student of current events. He avowed his belief in Socialism. "I cannot see, he declared, that the remedy for existing conditions lies anywhere else. But If it Is to be a remedy it must come slowlv. Violent revolutions do not, permanently solve these problems." On the subject of woman suffrage his opinion was decided: "It Is one of the most Important developments of this generation and one of the most hopetu). The men have made such a mess of things that if the women do not come to the rescue Im sure I dont know what is to become of us." TO BE (Continued From Fag hand in curtailing credit for nonexsen-tia- l industries. and In dealing with Individual applications generally for- loans Mili do not appear warruntej by local circumstances. t There will also bo s d.scusaion of the present rediscount rates. Beyond a modification of those now In effect, general Increases are not anticipated. Two of the federal reserve banks thote In Chicago and Minneapolis recently Increased the rediscount rate on Liberty bonds from Sh, per cent to 6 per cent. The San Francisco bank Is on a basis of a per cent. It Is understood that other banks have under consideration increases whh'h would- place the rate on bonds more on an equal basis a Liberty lib the 6 per cent rata now prevailing on commercial paper. Officials here believe the results of the f graduated rediscount rates application on the Kansas City district have been successful In restraining unnecessary use - Wl.-.v- On.) aside until tomorrow, when Senator Hitchcock of Nebraska, the administration spokesman, plans to open the Democratic attack. ENEMY NATIONS TO BE LEAGUE MEMBERS j OT to see our new assortment o I Sport Oxfords is t,o miss a complete exhibit of the most authoritative and Kmart styles of the season. Built along lines, they. give the foot that smart appearance so much desired bv the Kiri, Popular with women, also. N ' White tad fabric Brown or black kidskln 4 GOOD GOODS' We Need 200 Extra Salespeople to Help Us With This Great 20 , OFF SALE which is drawing daily increasing crowds, which we must take care of. If you cant come all day, come half day. ; , See Superintendent at Once. v models $5 $3,85; $7. $5.85,l $7 ( Brown calfskin ' $10 and $12. r' i man-tailore- d . $10 and $12. PROTEST TAXES FOR BONUSES. NEW ORLEANS, May 11. Resolutions protesting against additional taxation to raise funds for soldier bonus plans in congress were adopted at a meeting today of New Orleans banks, commercial bodies and Industrial plants. Increased taxation, ths resolutions said, "means Increased cost of living and Increased cost of living means additional labor disturbance, general dissatisfaction and discontent. ODESSA REPORTED TAKEN, CONSTANTINOPLE. May 11. -- The Russian smharnv here has received a report that the Poles and Ukreiiilitue have captured C'l'tc . the mogt r.qairiant mi r mi sea pw; c: aouLit.ru Rusulu vu ills - (Continued From Fag G EX EVA, May 10. Austria and probably Hungary may be admitted to the league of nations at Its firrt general meeting this summer. It is lesrned from a high source. Germany, Bulgaria and powlbly Turkey will be made members at the second aw.eion, the dale of which has not been fixed. . Germany, Jt Is reported, will particiIn the pate international financial conference at Brussels on the same basis as the billed nations and it Is further , of credit. pointed out that this Is part of the plan of allies to reestablish as soon as the PROPOSAL REPEALS WAft LAWS. possible political and commerca) relaWASHINGTON, May 11. Another bill tions with former enemy countries, takproposing repeal of all war law yraa ing the league of nations as the shortest introduced by Senator Jones, Republican, course to accomplish this end. The first It would be effective upon general meeting of the league of nations Washington. enactment. will be held at Geneva. .URGE WARSHIP TO BATUM. WASHINGTON, May 11 A resolution requesting JPresldent Wilson to send an American warship and marines to Batum, on the Black aea, to protoot American lives and property at that port and along the railroad to Baku was reported unanimously today by the senate foreign relations committee. POLES CONTINUE NEGOTIATIONS. WARSAW, May IL (By the Associated Press. forces have ousted ths Bolshevlkl from the Kiev bridgehead on the east bank of the Dnieper, according to latest army report received here, and have driven them farther eastward from that river. The Bolshevist have continued their artillery fire, but the shells are not reaching Kiev. The Poise have established themselves and have throughout the bridgehead moved their artillery to the east bank of the Dnieper. Kiev la reported quiet and orderly. On.) $1.85, $5.85, $7. - . ' MiscihiiimaanLs 118 Main Street. Brail ok Idaho Falls. . |