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Show TJIE SALT LAKE TRIBUNE, MONDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 14, 192L f Mn.- - Mary OGDEN DEPARTMENT , Themes Office, 420 Business, Twenty-fift- h Correspondent, 664; f Hickey Heavy Program Awaits Sixth Week of Fourteenth Senate Street. ", and 740; Society, 2100. 664 Start of Morning Sessions Probable Tomorrow; Added Time for Debate Will Aid Greatly in Disposal of Legislation. V ORGIES IN OGDEN GIVEN LONGTERM HE Utah state senate begins the sixth week of th fourteenth session of th legislature with thirty-si- x measure on the second reading calendar. Should tb senate do nothing other-thapea these forty? two measures e total of seventy-eigroll call will he required. Allowing the low averagk of half an hour to" roll call, this would be thirty-nin- e hours of debate. So far th senate haa held only afternoon sessions of maximum length of about three, and 'hours. AlMember oft Cathedral of the Madeleine lowing half an hour for routine and misit end active In cellaneous business per session, to comparish, organizations, die at heme, plete the present calendar even without any additions, would require thirteen days. This would require until March 1, leaving the senate- only ten more days in which to take up the remaining work presented to It. Morning sessions win add about two hours to the debate daily, and Jt la quite probable that the senate will start morn-- ! Ing sessions tomorrow. But even so. It Is almost mathematical certainty that the forty-fift- h .session day of sixty-da- y 'will have passed before all the bills now on second reading- - calendar been have r disposed bf. Are E. H. Mulkey Sentenced to in Nevada Revealed by Arrest of Five'- Year Twelve Men and Girls. Prison for Liquor Theft Conditions Startling , Feb. 13. Ogden's war on vice is to be carried on with vigorous action by the members of the police department Six young men and six young women will be given hearings fn the city court tomorrow upon charges of contributing to the delinquency of a minor and of lewd conduct Th ages of the defendants range from 18 to 25 years. Some of them will be held in fail pending the receiving of treatment for disease. Of the persons in Jail, six were arrested last Right ami six were arrested early this morning. Those arrested this morning are William Bpidet. 23 years of age, Joseph De Young, 24; Nina Cleveland, 25, Elia Cleveland, 22, Earl Anderson, 22, and A. R. Llndall, 25. . Spldol and De Young will be charged with contributing to the delinquency of a minor. The other- with lewd conduct. four will Those arreeted last night ' are Carl. 1 Lockwood,. 23 years of age; Helen Man-Bing, 24: Joseph Glllis, 20; Helen Brewer, 1 lor Virgie Cottle, 20, abd Lola Richard-- f son, 18. From Mist Cottls the police learned of the affairs In which the last six named, together with Spldei and De Young; had taken part. According to the police, they ; have eecured the Inamegyof other young ; men and women who participated In1 the , orgies, and additional arrests will be made at pnce, Jt is wld that the police also have, information regarding "parties" which were given by the young people at the hemes of friends- Where the parents are out of the city, Arrests are expected, in these cases. ""OGDEN-- Near East Relief Dinner to Be Held at Weber Club OGDEN, Feb. II. B, H. Mulkey. Southern Pacific brakaman, who was arrested in Ogden about ten days ago on the charge of having liquor In his possession and which was alleged to have been stolen from a box' car while th train was in Nevada, has been sentenced to the Nevada prison for a term of from one to five years on the charge of robbery. Word to this effect has been received by Pherlff R, D, plncock. who arrested Mulkey here. It was charged that Mulkey robbed a box car at Rozul. Nev. Jn the past' railroad men accused of robbery of box cars were arrested In Ogden and the charge was reduced to a misdemeanor and the men sentenced to short terms In the county foil. The future cases of box car robberies are to be tried in th state In which th rrim I committed and on felony charges raroad officials announced today In giving a report of the, Mulkey case. It is said that the railroad companies have announced that all case of theft on-h- CALLED BY DEATH for 32 Yeats Succumbs After Illness of .Long Duration. of City Resident V will be vigorously prosecuted. Ogden Will Celebrate Civic Improvement Week The death of Mra Mary Ellen Hickey, OGDEN, Feb. 13, Mayor Frank Francis widow of John Mickey, occurred y eater-da- y tomorrow with issue el proclamation, setat th home, 70 East First South ting aside the entire week as civic Improvement week. The action Is taken, at street, following a lingering Dines. Mra Hickey cam to Salt Lake thirty-twthe request of th Klwanls club In taking up th fight upon vandalism and year ago with her first husband, which, has been James Kirk, who died sixteen year in theaters, public buildings and reported railroad ago, hi wife, a daughter, Mrs, Victor depot. Th campaign I to cover all of Youngberg, and three sons, James H. the work, including a general phases cleaning Kirk, George iA. and Walter I Kirk, surup of premises and general improvement viving him. On August 8, 1914, Mra Hickey married her Becohd husband, who died four years ago, February 3. ARRESTED FOR SPEEDING. Mra Hickey waa the daughter of Terfton Larson, 2280 rence and Nora Dunning OBrien and wei OGDEN, Feb. 13 Eccles avenue, driver of a truck for the born in Chicago, 111,, December 16, 1857. Blackman & Griffin company, was ar- She was educated at St Marys convent rested last night by Police Chauffeur C. in Janesville, Wis, She is survived by her E. Lelser for speeding past the Interchildren and one brother, James OBrien. section of Twenty-fourt- h street and JefShe waa known by her friend a th ferson avenue. He waa released on 120 possessor at sn especially sunny and bail. amiable disposition and as a charity worker, She was a member of the Catho SUGAR FACTORY CLOSES. lic Woman's league gnd the Altar society a Red Cross worker. Although OGDEN, Feb. 13 The Amalgamated and was than two year, she remained Sugar company' Ogden plant closed aill for more benign character. down last night after having completed Her Walter L. Kirk, will arrive son, the season's run. The local had In from Ban Francisco, a longer run than any other factory of ftrdSalt Lake tonight factory another eon, George A. Kirk, left the company. , Denver for Balt Lake yesterday. Funeral services, wilt be held at 10 M o'clock Wednesday morning at the cathedral of the Madeleine. The body mey. be viewed at th thorn Tuesday afternoon. o A' petty;-thiever- . OGDEN, Feb. 11. Plans for the holding of another near east relief drive dinner at the Weber club in the Imme- diate future will be discussed Tuesday afternoon at 6.30 o'clock by representatives of the Ogden chamber of com- -' merce, the Weber, Rotary, Kiwanis and Progressive Business clubs. At the meeting of the club representatives, it Is said, , the plan for the dinner will ns, the holding of a dinner of beef stew, bread, coffee and pie at IS a plate. It is planned to Have the dinner at the Weber club within two weeks, in which time the proposed enlargement of the dining room Will be near completion. The suggestion has been made that if ail the organisations taking part in the affair promise to have 100 per cent attendance of membership that the club will arrange for spreading a table from the large dining room through to the reading room and parlor by throwing open the several sets of double door. The chit for th meeting of th representatives of the clubs has been signed by C. Angus Wright as chairman, and H, I. pack. f , . Cooperation Is Pledged by Weber County Sheriffs OGDEN, Feb. 18. Sheriff Richard D, Plncock and his department are planning on giving the fullest cooperation to Sheriff C. Frank Emery and department of Salt Lake county in the drive against confidence men. who are said to be in festing Salt Lake and Ogden. The action of th local sheriff was taken in response to a letter from Sheriff , Emery. MUNITIONS TO BE SHIPPED, f OGDEN, Feb, 13. Munitions fob th Ogden arsenal will be shipped from the east during the latter pari at March, according to Major Oliver H. Presby, in charge of the operation of the ordnance department The shipment for the Ogden ereenal during the months of March, April, May and June will probably be about 1600 carloads. . Bavarian Reply Respecting Disarmament Delivered RERUN, Feb. 13. (By the Associated Press.) The official text of tha Bavarian government's reply to the Berlin cabinet respecting disarmament was delivered Saturday. An official asserted the note waa not calculated to bring about - . , complications. The note, it wa teamed reiterated Bavaria apprehension regarding the feast billty of disbanding the civilian guard and put the responsibility on the central , government. , The problem promises to become one of the most complex the Berlin cabinet has had to contend with, as It Involves in great measure the right of Bavaria as one of the federated states, and also because it will call for the cooperation of the central government officials and the Bavarian authorities in gathering up the arms in Bavaria. The Berlin government realises that the undertaking a one which is likely to prbduce between it and the southern state. In view of the outspoken hostility, especially in th rural sections. One official summarized the Bavarian reply as an invitation to come and get the gun. LODGE NOTICES FRATERNAL BROTHERHOOD. Sego Lily lodge No. 252 will give a FUNERAL ANNOUNCED. card party tonight kt Knights of Pythias OGDEN, Feb. 13, Funeral services for 68 East Broadway. An invitation Daniel 8. Stowe, 84 year of age, who hall. extended to the public. died at the Dee hospital yesterday of psralyas, will be held at 8 o'clock KNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS. at th Larkin Wednesday afternoon Rocky Mouataln lodge No. 3 met In chapel. Bishop T. P. Terry will preside. Interment will be mad in City cemetery. regular eesriun last Thursday evening at the hall, 161 South Second East street. One candidate wa proved in the rank of DOCTOR IS ILL. esquire. Thursday evening a special OGDEN. Feb. 13. Dr. Retnhsld Kan-le- r, meeting will be held in remembrance of major of the medical unit of the the founding of the order, 19. national guard and a practicing physician 1864. The knight rank will February be conferred of the city, was removed to the Dee- hos- on one candidate a picked pital from hie home yesterday afternoon, team, after whli h bythere specially will be short suffering with a serious case of stomach talks by Grand Chancellor Rideout and aliment. Ilia condition tonight was re- others. The regular meeting of the 0. O. ported being serious. K. K, will take place tomorrow night, at which the Imperial representative will be elected. Hermlone temple, Pythian Sisters, will entertain at cards next Friday afternoon In Knigha of Pvthlar hall on East Broadway. Game will start at 2 o clock. 1 - MACCABEES, will hold a ahort Liberty review No. business, meeting Thursday afternoon at the I O. O. F, hall at 2 p. m which will be followed by a card soc laL Prises will be awarded and refreshment will be served. NEIGHBORS Woodbine elrcle party Wednesday hall. The public I believe, said a gentleman who oft- en visits us, that IU just surpriso my wife by sending her a Valentine. Give me a laey one with blue ribbons. g Come In today and tur-pris- C3 e your wifo tonight with the real bid fashioned kind, delivered at th E1 3 door. Com la and browse. Open evenings. . 2 ilJLUVi oooh OF No. will give a card evening In 1, U. O. F. la invited. k 41 SECURITY BENEFIT ASSOCIATION.! Utah council NO 3310, Security Benefit asaociatlon, hold ita organization meeting at the Knight of Pythias hall Saturday night. Forty bow members and about twenty by transfer cards from other slates formed the charter membership of the council. District Manager George W. Duffy was th organiser and gave Instruction In th work of the order and installed the following officer; President, Fred W. C'olver, vlte president, Isaac J. Ketrhom, second vice president, Mra Mary M. Weaver; Mra prelate, Martha J Ketehum; secretary, Joseph M, Reeves; financier, Mrs. Ora Hartooe; con uiKtor, Mr Jennta I Fftfek; vuard, Seirmifd V. Lovell, nUnl, Mr. Man Hfhatfer, Iruaieea, Mm. Rowan Furrow, Mr. KUtli Lew ey and Mrs Mae Rhaf-f- r. Mtny member from other mte were tIUng Present and will transfer hero hy the next moetlnjrprobably Flan have been made to hold weekly meeting, beginning KnUirday, March b. Th large Knight ot Pythfa hail ha been eeeured fur regular meeting every Saturday night. WOMEN'S RELIEF CORPS. Th Oliver O. Howard Women' Relief will entertain at a card party on corp Thursday afternoon at 3 o'clock at the Kn'ghte of Pythlae ball, prizes will be awarded end refreshments served. ,Th Ini lied. The chairmen on arpublic rangements eve Mrs Edythe Egan and Mr. Leona Parrackmen A meeting wm p. paid bv the executive board 1.1 o'clock, betoi th card eoolal. , r'Keeo-- WdmVtJ' Rblef-t-nrpThe f No. will hold It regular meeting at o'clock. The ooep will Wednesday entertain the Maxwell-McKeapost at a campfire Faturdey, February- at 1 o'clock In L o. O. r, hull. , 12 i.elV T Federal Inspector Will Superintend Sheep Dipping , , te The Tribune, MOAB, Feb, 13. R. W. McGinn!, federal sheep inspector, who baa been In ,Meab for several day on official duty, haa gone to Cisco and Weatwater to superintend the dipping or the Colorado-ownebands which have been held In quarantine for some time and whose owners drove them across the line in violation ot the proclamation of former Gov, Srnor Bamberger, The owners of the band had oom to an agreement with Utah official to dip the sheep before February IS, but until a few day ago they were still seeking te postpone the dipping until April 6. The state livestock board denied their petition and ordered them to proceed at once with the dipping. The state board has taken charge of the situation, with some aid from federal officials. It Is declared that all these bands have been exposed to scabies and that several of them are badly Infected with the disease. local sheepmen who were ordered to dtp Immediately when their bands were found Infected with scabies are insistent that the Colorado owners be shown no favors, I and they point out that little benefit to be had from the effort to tamp out the cab!ea if dipping I not enforced on all bands either infected or having been exposed. Dr. McGinnis has found scable In the bands of James Somerville, Boyd 8. Hammond and W. D. Hammond, local men, and these bands are undergoing the treat, ment to remedy the evil. The herd of M A. W. Myrup are also Infected with scabies and they r being taken to th vale north of Elgin for treatment. Inspector J. T. Neal is overseeing the of dipping of local hands in the absence Dr. McGinnis, The weather is- - mild and no losses resulting from dipping are ' looked for. Special - d- De Foe and Sieger to Meet in Ring Tuesday lake Trlbuss Leased Wire. NEW YORK. Feb. 13 Billy de Foe, the St. Paul featherweight, will find that he has a mans size job on hie hands when he tacklee Bammy sieger, the east Sd product, at Madison Square Garden Tuesday night for fifteen rounds. The Minnesota boxer has been casting sheeps eyes at the title for some time and is much gratified now that Johnny KH. bane ha consented to meet the winner of Tuesday nights struggle. i This boy, Sieger, is a strong, healthy walloper, who harbors the thought that he will soon be champion.. His quirk knockout of Johnny Murray at th Garden two weeks ago stamps him as a most dangerous opponent for all of the boy in hi division. Koumla rather strange to hear th form players trying to lay four to on that Bub Martin, th A. E. F. champion, knocks out Bill Brennan when they meet In their fifteen-roun- d bout at Madison Square Garden next Friday nlrhL Her' a men who stayed in there for twelve round with th champion Jack Dempsey but a ahort while back, and yet the wig one arc figuring that the Praottcal-l- y unknown Martin will take him with a sleep punch. Chicago Trtbaaa-Sal- t Railroad, to Extend Twenty Miles Nearer to Vernal le The Tribune. VERNAL. Feb. 13.' The Uintah y company it le extend it narrow gauge line twenty miles nearer to VerTh present terminus Is Watson, nal fifty-tw- o miles southeast. The new depot Is to be at Bonanza, which la located on one ot the largest asphalt veins In th world. 8urvys were completed lost year and construction Is planned to be dona during th preeent year With this new Vernal will only ba thirty-tw- o mile from a railroad. Rpeelel Rail-wa- . a o. Speed Now Necessary. In addition to these there are already measures In th senate committee, and, judging by the speed made senate committees, these will all he hy reported out long before the forty-fift- h Moreover, th house fo sending dey, ever house bills at a pretty fair rate, and these, too, must ultimately find their wey to the senate calendar. Therefor it Is easy to see thati the legislative work will have to- - be both steady and speedy unless a large number of hill are to which Is be "lost In th last crush, th fate of so many legislative attempts. The present senate calendar Is not particularly remarkable for th number ot measures considered Important. The house administration measure proposing to combine the dairy and food bureau with the state boerd of health will probably he reached Tuesday or Wednesday. It 'wee passed by th senate once, but wa held on notice of reconsideration, th wa result of which wa that the bin com recommitted. Th Joint agricultural mittee has struggled with it at several hearings since then, and mow it is back on the second reading calendar. Dairymen" of th state are making a strong effort to have this bureau placed under the proposed department of agriculture, instead of the Btate board of health, but the Joint committee o far ha adobhered to the view that the primary conle to protect the ject of the bureau 1 It the than dairyman. sumer, rather th debate in the quite possible that mea on this senate will be strenuous lire. i forty-thre- e -- Keen Debate Threatened. wm 1 Eighty-on- e When You See Him Comiii '" ' Bills Introduced! There have been introduced In the senbills ate go far this session eighty-on- e and ten resolutions or memorials. Of resbills and on these, only twenty-foolution are in committee. There are eighteen senate bills and two resolutions on the second reeding calendar and four senate bills on the third reading calendar. The senate has already killed, chiefly hy withdrawal, nine bills And on resolution, and one of the resolution did not require th ratifying vote of the houee, bills Therefore, out ef th eighty-on- e and teij resolutions, twenty-o- n bills end five resolutions have bean sent to the house, and that body has already passed and returned to th senate thirteen bills and four resolutions. It la stUl holding eight senate bills and on seriate revolution. The house hag not. yet killed any senate measure, but one ot them la on the house table, which is a rather, precarious place for a senate measure te r&sie Of the senate measures that havt passed both houses, nine are In tb senate engrossing and enrolling committee and en is in the house fdF the speaker signature. 'Three bills and four resolutions from the senate have been seat to the governor for big signature. He bee notified the senate so far that he he th three bills of th and three signed of th resolutions, forma notification of tb memorial urging pongfret signing to appropriate larger amounts for the division of irrigation, bureau of public roads, not having as yet reached the sen-- I ate. III: . Following that bill comes the group of measures having to do with tha establishment of th state department of registration. While this group ha caused considerable debate before the senate now committee. It hardly expected, a favorable rethat the measures have will to go care senator port, that th Into details of the rather vexing aub-automobile registration raised. Th jects measure soon follows, and la a lnathy bia, of which tb examination of detail mar require much Intiro eenate commit-te- e, the Of the measures those that threaten the keeneat combine the etet btU to are th tb board of medical examiners with two State department of registration; the whlcn workmen' compensation bills, of one or will have to select none, since the two bill dobill.not harmonise, end the Income tax With regard to the latter, the measure is so long and the questions involvedses-0 Intricate that It Is probable several sions will be devoted to it. compensation bu The first workmen le th on by Senator Harrison E, Jenn industrial kins, proposing a commission and th divorce of the state Insurance fund from the commission. It Senator Jenkins will it not believed that commisn Insist urgently on the sion. In view of th opinion expressed by commission senator th that some of th haaVuaal-Judlctpowers which would make a larger board more advisable. But to Insist the Salt Lake senator propose taken that th state Insurance fund he which out of tha hand of the commission, for the both law the has to administer fund and for the competing etock insurs workmen ance companies engaged in the compensation field in Utah. 1 . de-ba- te T one-ma- al Diverging Reports Certain. Hot Bread is a luxury, that may be .enjoyed at every meal. , The, best of all ways to assure that not a crumb of your loaf will he wasted! ROYAL BREAD is good any Way you usp it. When its a day old, freshen it. by transforming it into HOT BREAD this way: . , , Slice your bread la (ool generous tOioaa, mtttas only 'Press the fBleo closely to keep tbs put tray through. loot formation. , Slip Into to even tat few minutes. it with Tho result will spoil true -- ''I: Three Measures Signed. that mads co&erqsitbsidBg Tfco bread Of the three bills signed, two were in troduced by Democrats. Senator Georg H. Deme bill to alter th payment for stat lands being en and the commit te substitute for senator J. William bill regarding th unwarranted Knights use of insignia of certain military and patriotic orders, including tho American Legion, being th other. These ere th only two btils that will find ihelr way Into tha compiled laws, since th other bill Signed, introduced by Senator David Jenson, simply appropriated $33,040 lor Ui expenses of the session. renate in return for th twenty-on- e bin and five senate resolutions sent to the house, that body has sent to tha sen-aforty-on- e bills and six resolutions Of the senate has returned sieves house bill and five resolutions, all passed. Seventeen more house bills and on resolution ere now on the senate calwndara, two of them on third reading. There are only thirteen house bills In th aenet committees, and ot these one came over February 2 end all the others last Tuesday or later, Th senate committees, therefore, can hardly he accused ef holding up any house measure to date. Eight of the eleven house bill passed by th senate have already been signed hy the president, and are probably In the governor office, and all th house resolutions passed by the senate also hev been forwarded to their respective proper Rrestol You take out a loaf that is unequalled for deHeiousness Of Bread "flavor and eaty texture. nt -- School Tax Bill Due. Another bUl which has been promised, hut has not yet made Be appearance, I a measure, to set a taxing limit for school th state purpeseacourtDecisions by aside have eat any such now to the llnit the and only limit, amount of money the people of th varl ou counties of Utah may be. asked pay for th an hoc is In their rfwn roui rt ties le that set hy the constitutions! Inhibition te tlw confiscation of property by taxation. Boards ot education can simply make a showing that so much money Is needed to carry on th schools tor th current year, and th county oom. mlsalonera. under th supreme court decisions, hev no option but te fix a tax levy which will rale the .amount th board save is needed. It Is felt that this le both unjust end and a serious argument dangerous, th test of tha stat This bread is sold by all Neighbor- hood Grocers. - ? ROYAL BAKING COMPANY. Ex-Serv- ATTENTION! Free Books Free Tuition destination. Work to Commence on , Vemal-Hayde- n Highway . Bpeelal te Tb Tribe a. VERNAL, Feb. 1$. Commissioner Roy Taylor at LapAint announces that construction will begin at once on the two last links of the main county trunk read west from 'Vernal to Hayden. Rook blasting Is te begin on the horseshoe dugway Just west of Vernal, and construction on the Uintah river bridge north ot Lee ton ts te begin. Since th $22,004 Improvements were made last year, heavy traffic is going over this rout end with the oompletton of the dugway end th Uintah river bridge there will - be e first class auto road from Vernal te all north Duchesne county point. , Deaths and Funerals DEATHS. , Thornes Nichole ot Salt Like. 73 year of age, died yesterday at a local hospital. He la survived by a eon, Wesley Nlcho1 of Pueblo, Colo. Th body le at th r William Bchrader, two-yeold eon of end Mr. Murray Schrader of 1557 West Eighth South street, died yesterday at a hospital In Balt Lake. H Is survived by his parents end by five brothers HI father (s stationed at and sisters. InFort Douglas with th Twsnty-flr- f Hsll-Ricke- st QUARTZ LIGHT PUBLICITY FOR GREENRIVER. Commencing next week, Greenrivar will again have a medium of publicity, arrangements having been mad whereby th of Moab will publish weakly a Oreenrtver department. Greenrivar has been without a newspaper for th past six months. nt th latest' and most successful treatment by means of ulira-violrays, for pyorrhea, eceema. Infections, hemorrhoids, and many troubles to woman. Treatment Is painless, result prompt, cast ' trifling. is et ar i CONSULTATION AND TRIAL TREATMENT FREE te Hour 10 te 121 to 2G0ya MAIN V. FEELING AWAY NO CALOMEL pB RAWT rOElfflftt MOB MADE nOM MOTE, RUBS 3141114X17 K MONET-BACCUABANTT IN BACK MX ALONZO 0. BLISS MEDICAL CO. E$t 1888, WASHINGTON, D.C .,d t COMPOUND CLEARS THE THROAT of phlegm sad mucus, Slop that tickling, opens tha it passage for easier breathing sod coale the raw, inflamed eurlaees with heel inf, soothing medicine. Grateful Father Tall What It Did W. K. Curry. DO u Ith St.. EsaMvItta. lod writs as 1 hava a Uttle girl I yaara te has dial si trouble with trou. 1 have sssd I Jgsod Hosayaed Tsr Csaysund, ivin4t ts directions, sad sbtsiatn mot sat ysliai (or bar. My will sod I us k wksamr botbsrsd wnb ia bed old or sough, sag I wilt Say Ibat k ia the best remedy lor s bad sold, eouftbg throat I rouble as trou that I aver row. Parents who nas Foleys Hooey sod know It la sale and oo harm will come even if an overdose should be It teste good And' given by aecideot. children like it. It wont npeet the delicate stomachs of young children, delicate person of eldeily people, chramin-johnsoDrugs. L) a u. Bangertar Bros. to 8. Z Jeung. STREET I vu NOTICE. 47 FOR TEN YEARS Foleys Honey and Tar Tr THERAPY Salt Lake. Bpeelal to Tha Triboas. Feb. 13 MOAB, 7 am securing remarkable results In obscure, obstinate and distressing affections of th skin end, mucus membrane without the use of drug. fantry, Mra Jpsl Potter Ebert, 49 year rf ago, the wife of J, S. Ebert, died at t o'clock yesterday afternoon at tb fam y home, 433 Pleasant avenue, following an Illness of three months. Mra Ebert is survived by her husband and by two eon FVenk an d Georg Daniel Ebert, all Ur In FUNERALS, Funeral service for Thoms W. Mosr, 46 years of age, who died at Ma lad, Idaho, hut Thursday, will he held at I o'clock tomorrow afternoon at The Larkin under, Burial all! be In taking establishment. Mr. Moeer la survived City cemetery. Thomas by hi parents, Mr. end Mr Moser of Salt Lake; his widow, Mr. Emma Moaor of Malad; a son end a daughter, fir brother and thres sisters Second Floor. SPECIALIST Mr. lng 7:13 to 9:16 p. m. Dr.C.T.KEfiDALL -- ar DRIVES TIRED Call or Phone Was. 5277, 338 Main St. ' undertaking establishment LIVER&KJDNEYS OPPORTUNITY , Classes . X ACTS ON tc . oe Over Oai Mlttloe Tablets Takas Patty THIS IS YOUR GOLDEN -- romn SWtTUM -- Fifteen courses to chaos from. An excellent faculty to teach you. Registration Closes Feb. 15 wire admitted on payment of regulated tuition fae. Non-eerv- Koerehtust , tvm stoaat wmier dwrowua THE KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS EVENING SCHOOL Second Term, Its Opens Monday, Feb. 7th t BOSS Heri ice lor beck debts. Produce Co. has sold Will not b responsible , 39$ ' Buffered with Stomach Trimble, Indiges tion, Catarrh, General Debility, and final ly I became reconciled to my fate a bal I received a trie) treatment oi hopeless. DrT Burkhart's Vegetable Compound, and from the first day I began to use It I felt relieved. Jsenett Colby, Stguerd, Utah. Writ today for a treatment. Pay when cured. Address Dr. Burkhart, $21 Main St., Cincinnati, O. Druggists, 10 day (Adv.) treatment, 25c; 70 days, 56a. Cuticura Talcum FudaUhdyfop Always Healthful 2 pUfwxmfOmifl r IrftoniMlMjtattXllaM. nnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnn n - - n n n n n n wi For Valentines u (7S ' i n n LO n constitution at Th supreme court by th esegmlllar bill to glv $2$ per capita sup. haa school te now of port the state t th com passed both h ousts, but aa , tie, ( The other bill before the senate Judiby Senator ciary committee at presenthadle much do George H. Dern, who haa law now ontothe with th framing of the HI" statute book, and Its amendment bill proposes virtually the amendments commisrecommended by the Industrial sion. On some of these It 1 understood that for s, example, not will Insist, he the agricultural labor be brought under each even when compensation law. But senator has made his concessions It Is not thought that the Jenkins bill and th Dern bill can be amalgamated Into one measure, and since both senators are members of th Judiciary committee of th senate It is practically a certainty that there will be majority and minority reports from th committee. Thia be been th fat of both the original compensation bill la 1917 and th bills to emend It In lilt, and In each case the result has been a protracted debate 6ti th floor of th senate. It would now from appear that there can he little escape such a result during the preeent session. Notwithstanding th earnest and studious efforts that were made in th preparation of legislation for th present session. and In spit of th large number of administration bill now well on their way to become law, there are still important measures that nave not been Introduced In either house, and with which th legis. latur will bsve to wreetle. On of these I the administration measure for th creation of a department of agriculture, which will probably hare a group of related bill do articulate the new lepert-mewith th present state machinery. This bill. It le understood., his been considered by the Joint committee on agriculture, and It Is quit possible that when It la introduced It will go through both If well lubricated seeing that houses President Thoms Ti. McKay object to word th us of a shorter Anglo-Saxo- n conveying much the same Impression. V Start heating a loaf of KOYAL BREAD, e one-ma- 1 1 ur ta BAY VIEW CLUB TO MEET. of capital in against th Investment euch conditions It has been Feb 18 --- Th KATRV7LLK, Bay View Utah Under th law chib will meet at th home of Mrs, Z thought that putting the conatl foe greater stat Henry Jacobs In East Locust , street, tutlcnal amendment support of w hoots Into effect should he Wednesday afternoon. bill ta w't a limit another r ' "I !' secormpaniqd by 4 I. A, on th school tag levy- - that- - would. Htami ' ' ILL EMALLFOX, KATSV7LE. Fch. 18 Vernon Mansell, eon of Mr. end Mra W. H. Mansell, Is 111 at hi bom her suffering from an attack qt smallpox. n lf - . , penlon measure to limit school levies has cot made its appearance in either houee. It has also been suggested that there wlir be other method dgVleed for raising the extra amount for th state support of school, about 11,404,664 par annum. Instead of an income tax, but so far no measure for the raising ef any auch Important sum haa as yet appeared. The foregoing are only a few of the measure still to be debated In both bouses, and. they are sufficient to Indicate that the session will not be ex. traordinarily short. ht - . nnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnn - . ' r )4 |