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Show THE SALT LAKE TRIBUNE, SUNDAY HORNING, FEBRUARY-1-3. II c HE -- engagement of Miss Natalie Taimadge, youngest of ths titters, to Buster Keaton, lies been announoed by Mlaa Taimadge, who Is new at Palm Beach, Fla., with her mother. Miss Taimadge said she had not soon har flaneo for two years end that the courtship had bssn carried on by telegraph. rp Tel-mad- x IC FIRST TO GIVE SALT LAKE MELLOWER PRICES ALWAYS FIRST TO SHOW THE NEW STYLES FOR LESS : ti mm. Mam ak ID) Idaho Senate Refuses to Abolish Normal at Albion by a Decisive Vote. -- , Action Believed to Forecast Fate ' of Other Measures 'on State Institutions. Least. r-- Beginning - to Th Tribune, BOISE, Ida., Feb. 11 Tne senate ot . the present legislature emphatically re fused today tS abolish the state normal school located at Albion, in Cassia county. thereby settling a controversy that t arises biannually and upon which much pending legislation hinges. The act. It' IS 1 believed In legislative circles here to- -, night, clearly Indicates that from now on ho effort will be made to attack other stats Institutions, but that they will be It is ,1 liberally taken cars of Instead. said to mean that the fight against the state board ot education to abolish the office of commissioner of education will ' be smothered (n the upper house. It j was the north that saved the I normal. That is conceded, and ths north Is Virtually Interested In Its own normal and In ths stats university. For eleven years ths Albion fight has j been an issue in the legislature. The (effort td wipe' out that Institution this session , fulled as miserably as It has failed every other time the Issue has come up. j 1921. Demonstration of Tomorrow-Forci- ble . SpMltl & ? J 4 V a. fjni . Yeaman Champions Bill The state affairs committee Introduced bill seeking abolishment. (That mea- -' sure came before the senate on third reading today. It was defeated by a vote of 21 to 16. M. B. Yeaman of Idaho Kalla chairman of the Committee, championed the measure. ' He urged it be con sldered on Its merits alone and tnat neither personalities nor prejudices be Injected Into the debate. He asserted there .baal.-faygmaintained a lobby which had been active In Ite effort to kill the bill a n before It c&uld be given fair and Impartial consideration. The Institution, he said; has cost the ' state over 21,000,006 and was not giving results The Republican party he hem committed to a program of econ'to be and should movO to hboiish the omy school. , Expense Excessive. Senator McMurray of Cassia county, where the school Is located attacked the He charged that since the measure. was created It . state board of education has been against ths normal and that U the same energy used against It had been Used In Its favor It would be one of tnt leading Institutions of ths state. Paddock Washington asserted the state would money If It would take all of the d students at the normal, pay their fare,-- expense and tuition and Send them to the best normal school in tne I nlted States. Ths average annual cost ' j per pupil he held to be 1W. .... The portrait of Abraham Lincoln, draped In his countrys flag, held a place In of honor front the speakers desk of and rev, In the house of representatives, was erent tribute paid by the house to his memory by suspending its work at the hour of 11 o'clock and listening to memorial addresses. tf rau-roa- Bill Goes Over. Primary common consent consideration By the direct primary of bill, scheduled for Anal consideration, was postponed until Monday. By common consent ths special order for the afternoon, amendment to the bill regulating the sale of alcohol, was continued to Monday afternoon. Five bills were passed and two were defeated. Six bills were considered In the committee of the whole house, and when the committee arose, shortly 'after the noon hour, one bill was killed by Indefinite postponement. Two new bills were - .Introduced by the committee on state affairs, the house granting permission to suspend the rules for ths purpose, though was the last day for Introduction Friday of bills under those rules House bill No. 102, by Severson, was one of those passed. It la designated to relieve the dry farmer by extending the time on which he can pay his rental on state land lease until October 1 for the present year and until the same date for 1S2I. By statute, leases on stats lands are payable In advance. . House Joint memorial No. 4 also passed. It calls upon congress for Such relief for - farmers as may be possible by egtendlnt the assistance of the Federal Farm Loan bank. Editor of The Nation En r counter - Hostile - Demon stration .While Speaking. a 4 a S , CINCINNATI," Ohio, Feb. 12 While Oswald Garrison Vlllard, editor Of The Nation, was addressing a combined meet, Ing of the City club and the Womanl City club here this afternoon a crowd of end dethirty men swept aside the policewere tectives at the outer door, but prevented from entering 'the auditorium, waa where Villard apeaking, by other police. The men who rushed the outer door made their way into an anteroom, but got no further. One man waa cut on tha head by glass. Women in the audience became alarmed at ths disturbance, raised the windows facing on the street and called for the pollre. Their cries attracted a throng JollcS led by Chief of Police Copeland threw the men out of the Vllanteroom and cleared the sidewalk lard did not lose his composure during ths uproar and kept On speaking. Cries of "Lets go''' and "We demand to hear this man! preceded the attempt to force entrance into the meeting room of the club. Herbert Seal, whose hand was cut dur-n- g the melee, was escorted from ths place by tbs police. He was said to have been In the.. crowd that tried to break up the meeting. He is the son of a livestock dealer and his brother was the first Cincinnati soldier killed In France. ' After the police had cleared tha hallway, stalrcasea and the sidewalks In front of the building. Mr, Vlllard resumed his further speech, concluding it without any He was escorted out of ths Interruption. hall to an automobile by police and went to a hotel. A charga of assault and battery was preferred against Herbert Seal by Guy Mallon, an attorney. Seal said that he was pushed up the Stairs by a crowd behind him and someone struck him. Attorney Mallon was struck In ths face by one of the Invaders. . 'W Wheat Growers Seeking to the Middleman Eliminate . I. i The National AsWheat Growers today decida cooperative plan of selling their product in an effort to save aptne proximately 55 cents a bushel through elimination of the middleman s profit.. This action was taken at the ftnal meeting of the executive board of the association. The growers plan to establish Central receiving stations In each state, where the farmers may send their whsat and obtain a receipt for lb From these stations the wheat will be sold direct to Junkets Defeated. ' House bill No. 132, Indefinitely post- the millers, ritatlona for receiving wheat will be established at all large seaalso on recommendation of the commitponed to handle export trads, It was said. tee of the whole house, would have pro- ports of the board voted to start Members vided authority for a state convention of Work on ths plan Immediately, so that travwith their county auditors annually, All us. results may ba obtained. eling expenses paid by the state. Ander. quick to be handled by son of Ada attacked the bill scathingly, tails of the plan are none but experts will telling of earlier days when sheriffs were the association and glad to attend state conventions at their be employed. own expense. If officials of today were more conscientious and less grasping, he declared, part of the tax burden would be reTaken to moved. Senate bill No. 54. by Boughton, requirIdaho, Feb. 12 Mrs. POCATEUjO, ing that county commissioner sitting as mother of Mrs. county boards of equalisation, shall com- Dorothy Christensen, Peterson, died this morning at plete their duties by the fourth Monday Harry ot Mrs. Chrishorns her the daughter. in July of each ear, was passed without cams to Pocatello last summer ; tensen a dissenting vote, had Los and endeared herfrom Angeles Had self to a large circle of friends 4 Association shs lived until March spa would havs been 81 years of age. Closes Meeting Boise Another daughter and son live A Monmouth, 111., where the txody will be sent tomorrow for burial. ,Mr. and Mrs. HarBpeelsl to The Tribune. Peterson will accompany the body. ry BOISE, Idaho, Fob. 12. Reports of ths funeral services In this city will resolutions committee and the reelertlon beTha conducted by the Rev. C. H. Cleaves of all the 1920 officers of ths association of the Congregational church. for the coming biennium, were the features of the final session of the annual NO WORD FROM DISABLED VESSEL. association meeting of the Idaho No additional NEW YORK. Feb. at the Boise chamber Mining of commerce to- word has been received of the shipping flay. Resolutlong adopted by the mining men board steamer Hlro, reported yesterday Included an Indorsement of senate bill as disabled In mid ocean. Advices yes4571, Introduced Into congress by Senator terday were that another ship had gone sad It is believed hare Chamberlain, which - provides - for an to her assistance) Into the amendment of ths present horns, that the lilco Is beingforassisted the steamer stead law, which Is working such an In. nearest port Hope now overdue St Boston from long Justice to the prospector throughout the Hewitt, public land states. Recommends! Ion for Rabins, Texas, has been virtually abanthe repeal of this act also waa Included doned by shipping Interest In another resolution, adopted. By unanimous consent and a vote of TWO ARK KILLED IN CLASH. thanks and appreciation Jerome J. Bay, BVENOS A1RE8. Argentina, Feb. Two H, president; J. Kldrldge, vice weis killed and a number of Kavanal Macbeth, secretary-treasure- r president;of otherspersons were wotinded In a clash Friday the association, and ths entire executive between laborers and polios at VUIaguay, board were reelected to serve during ths Klo provlnc of fcntre account next biennium. The police, the states, resisted an attempt by tha laborers to release an EKKfl POLITICAL PEACE Imprisoned comrade. KAROO, N. t).. Feh. It A move for political peace In North Dakota," and NEORO WOMEN AIK INVESTIGATION cooperation between all factions and inWASHINGTON. Feh. IS Negro womterests waa Instituted today m letters en from twenty states, meeting here at sent to the various eltlaa of tha stats the call of tha National Association for by ths Fargo Commercial club The let- the Advancement of Colored People to. ters eugteit series Of to whl h day presented to ths National Womanl ths Nonpartisan league, meeting a request that It urge congress commercial and banking Interests and all kinds of farm party rt to Investigate ths allrsed disenfram and cooperative nf negro women in the south at.JUa snail be orgpirlsatlQfia invited . n. elm lb Uuii guiWral CHICAGO, sociation of ed to adopt Neb. 12 r Comparison TKese, Special Suits Priced, h to One-Thir-d Below All Competition : k One-Fourt- Body of Pocatello Woman Be to Illinois t Idaho Mining and Marked Greatly Below Those of the Ordinary Clothier's Sale" Prices for Garments Now Out of Season. Why Pay More for Old Stock? -- at 12-- , t Gray Bros, winter stocks are no more. Months ago Gray Bros, foresaw the declining markets and immediately unloaded, giving patrons every economic ad. vantage at jt time when the public appreciated the savings. This offer embraces Gray Bros, famous specialized suits in the very latest spring styles from makers of renown.clothes the market has1 Spits in spring weight, spring ojlorings, spring patterns the highest grade of sale" prices, The garments included in our pres-eto offer. No picked over stock. No clothes cheaply bought by unscrupulous makers to sell at unequaled $30 and $40 assortment! represent the most recent fashions for the NEW season and we guarantee every suit to he - hand-tailore- FOUR LOSE LIVES IN BLAZE. MEMPHIS, Tenn . Feb. 12 Two women and two children were burned to death today In a fire with h destroyed th upper y floor of a dwelling at 475 Ponloc avenue. two-stor- e 25 to 35 Per Cent Under the Prices oi Any Other Salt Lake Store hiss-Ine- n ready-for-eervic- nt wr. I WILL BAN PUBLIO DANCES. rORT WORTH, Texas, Fsh. 12 -I- answer to petition presented In person by 100 woman, tha oily commission todny agreed to pass an ordinance against pub llu dance halls. ed Do Not Confuse Gray Bros. Special Values .With the Loudly-Shoute- d Offerings of Belated Clearance Sale of Winter Clothing Now Being Advertised Hereabout It 140-ac- So-Call- ) 250 South Mein Street 31 3C t |