OCR Text |
Show X X N THE SALT LAKE TRIBUNE, SUNDAY MORNINO, JUNE 4, 1922. . OGDEN. DEPARTMENT Phono Office, Ogden Thestro Bnilding. Business, 664 and 740; Boclftty, 2190. 664; Correspondent, TOURISTS INVITED TO SALT. LAKE AND OGDEN Temptingly Arrayed- - 1 ' - H l,i. M I sy' , v t ''J 'itJ ' 4 " I X - r " i' '.' z? j i C"s yy T'f ' V - y I S ! v s' r, 5 ' , ' 4 yCv. 'w A' f" tlw keynot f publicity rgmlzitlOAiv attractina vUltort to th munlcIpcUtioc. ;? t 'XT W rfJ.vv'W v y uvldcncbd by tbc CoopfW of " U vXV K F v 4 ; , s i' lirgt dgn juct . v . y ; ? erected at v' i;v ft - k i!u - Eebe far the purpcaa ( Senate Candidates Open Ogden People Ready Welcome to Travelert Ogden Headquarters of Commerce Chamber Invite Automobilists to Visit the Two Cities. BeOGDEN, Jun 3. Cooperation tween the two largest cities of the state. Salt Lake and Ogden, being carried on through thetr chamber of commerce associations, Is bearing its first real fruits. This in shown la the sign which has been placed at Echo, in Summit oounty, which welcomes not only the automobile tourist to Utah, but is so placed that the traveler upon the incoming Union Pacific trains gets the message of the two organizations. The sign te fifty feet long and ted feet "In height and placed where It looms before the automobile Driveler for several hundred feet. The Sign sets out that from Echo to Ogden Is a downhill grade over a fine road and then thirty-el- g miles of a paved Bead to Salt Lake. S. PJchardrof the Secretary chamber of commerce, who was one of the originators of the idea, accompanied by John W. Nickerson and newspaper representatives, visited Echo yesterday ' and procured photographs of the completed sign, copies of which will be placed on display in the Salt Lake Commercial club and the Ogden Weber club, which also or the homes of the chambers of commerce It was found that the road east of OGDEN, June I. Chairman George W. Goddard of the general committee for the United Commercial Travelers convention. which will meet in Ogden on June 8, 8 and 10, has called a meeting of all committees for tomorrow morning at W oclock, at which the final plans for the convention and outing wll be considered. It Is unofficially announced that every letail fpr the meeting of the travelers in Ogden has been completed. Chairman Goddard said the indications are that between 10,000 and 12,000 vis itors will come to Ogden on the day o( when the big entertainment features, there will be a parade, buffalo barbecue, baseball game, street carnival and . Mardl Gras bah at the White City. Mi-- Goddard added that at least three governors of adjoining states would be present for tbe big final day. Jesse S. Richards, secretary of the chamber of commerce and chairman of the publicity committee for the convention, announced this afternoon that the chamber of commerce would have an Information bureau on the city hall square with a competent person in charge. Pin-coc- -- ss Superintendent Board Named seo-reta-ry Ban-for- d. Oft'FiCER NEARLY WELL. OGDEN, June I. William Dick, former traffic officer of the police department who has been ill for several months, visited the department today for the first time in many weeks. Mr. Dick is very much Improved in health. William IT. Wattls of OGDEN, June Ogden and Ernest Bamberger of Balt Lake, candidates for the Republican nomination for United States senators, have opened headquarters in Ogden. Mr. Wat-tis- 's headquarters are in the offices of Arthur Woolley, chairman of the county organization, in the Bcclee building. Wll-lyT. Greenwell, secretary of the county committee, is in charge of the office. Committeemen - and precinct chairmen have been enrolled in the preconvention contest. The interests of Mr. Bamberger are being handled by Willlam C. Howell, Fred Meisner and Sol J. Kaplan. The headare in the Howell block. quarters No other candidates tor senator has been mentioned in Weber county thus far. Other political matters In Weber county will probably be considered after the Republican and Densecratio state conventions.. The county Democratic organisation la being perfected in the city and county. It Is expected a new central committee will ba named at tha first meeting. un seOGDEN, June riously injured at 6 o'clock this afternoon when he was thrown 'from a motorcycle. which was struck by tha automobile driven by W. -- Grover of Garland, Utah. J. Benson, who was riding with Brown, received slight Injuries. Tna accident happened at the corner of - First street and Washington. Benson, whe was driving north on the avenue, started to turn across the street and was struck by Grovers automobile and hurled about thirty feet.was removed to the Brown hospital, where it was found his Injuries consisted of a number of bruises on the body, but no broken bones. Grover was arrested by the police pending the investigation, ana later released. Weber Bar Association Holds Monthly Luncheon OGDEN, June $. Tha Weber County Bar association held the first monthly luncheon meeting of several months at the Potter cafe at noon today. Acting President Arthur E. Pratt presided. Addresses were made by C. R. Hollingsworth, L. J. Holther, Arthur Wool-lePresident Pratt and Charles L. Farr. The latter's talk was in tbe nature of a Mr. Farr is planning farewell address. on going to Los Angeles to make his home. v, PATROLMAN TAKING VACATION-OGDEJune 3. E. J. McKeon, patrolman of the police department, left this afternoon for Yellowstone park on a thirty days' leave of absence. He will return to Ogden July 4. N, SALT LAKERS TO SPEAK. OGDEN, June t. Apostle James BL Taimadge and President Seymeur B Young of Salt Lake wll) be tbe speak-- ri at the quarterly conference of the North Weber etake conference tonaor- GOOD SERVICE PROMISED. eer. 0GDBN, June 3 A twenty-minut- e vice will be maintained on the Ogden tomorrow canyon car line afternoon, beginning at noon. During thee forenoon the service will be every forty-fivminutes, beginning at 8 30 o'clock in The morning. -- Seven Days in Lil PHONE US YOUR PICNIO AND LUNCH ORDERS We will have it all ready when you call. (Copyright, 1921, by Balt Lake Tribune.) It hae been an June cxcit iig week for the average New Yot r. Not only ha he had hia own affaire to take up hie attention, but he hae also grown crosaeyed in the attempt to keep track of young Mathild4 McCormick and her nuptial pvana. Nobody has feK more nerved up over these shifting arrange menu than the Gotha mate, uniat, to be sure, it might be Mcthilde big arrangements than the Gothamite, Watched witu interest while Mathilde dashed down the avenue on a shopping tour. He hung about the Plaza, watting te catch a glimpse of the young woman. With interested gaze he caw her baggage cent to the Cunard pier. And when It came time for the ehip to sail, he was on the dock some 3u0 of him to wish the bride-elegodspeed. Instead, wAh shocked, eyes he saw the McCormick baggage yanked off the boat at (he last minute and learned with no less shocked ears that Mathilda was on her way to Chicago to seek a way ont of tha difficulties whieh mother had placed in the way of a June wedding among the Aipa. Mathilda's trunks are sttn In the McCormick suite at tha Plasa. The average New Yorker is still looking in that d.roc-tlo- n 'and listening' hard for any broath of rumor. It all goes to" prove ones mors what a simple, childllka heart tho aver-ag- o New Yorker owns This child' ke heart reoeived an awful shock tho other one result of the day, however, and as shock It demonstrated even more chLd-Uk- e readiness to U amused.' Ni-f- YORK. last-minu- te ct 77 E. 2nd South 176 So. State Remember, tha number Wai. 6454 SpciilistHUGHES 2nd Floor Hooper Building. V'" Headaches, eye defects, nerneuralgia, cross-eyecorrected. vousness, s, Five Year Phyaiclan El.vaw y..r a .pcclglltt it Most of the water frorh the Cef skills burst through a three-fomain one afternoon end went roaring in great waves down Broadway from , Eighty-six- th street to Columbus circle. It was a Htti matter of tv million rushing gallons. more watet ao bon v Wants than had been seen on Broad- -, way sinus ttoe prohibition amendment ot made White Goods. Sale Special For One Week Only All-Whi- ts Mercerized T able Damask at Half Price Regular $3.00 a yard, special These are H-I- O morial day observancea Solemn, beautiand reverent though the services were at the monument unveiled in Brooklyn to the war heroes of the N assembly district, they had their touch of a smile. For Anthony Pentoln, whose name was Inscribed among those of the eighty-thre- e dead heroes, waa among the spectators of the ceremony. Through an extraordinary chance of war, a letter addressed to Pen tola had been found In the pocket of an unidentified soldier. The monument had been Inscribed and erected before Pentola learned that his name waa on tha list of tha dead. ful th i George B. Lenox motored Into town the ether forenoon with his bousa trailing at tha tail end of his car. Lenox tlkea to traveL Bo do hia wife and daughter. They happen to be on their way- - to Beattie now from Watertown, N. Y. Inox said they didn't want to spend a lot of money stopping at hotels, so 'they just rigged up a hots) their Is a carpenter and pfhitched It on behind. Tha bouse has eieotrlo light, screen doors and window, ns well eg tha merit of al- - V Regular $3.50 a yard, special . .$1.75 very exceptional values and only a limited number of patterns left. A ways being able to accommodate the Lenox family, no matter where night overtakes them. At present they are camped on a varan iot in the Bronx. own--Le- some . . $1.50 113-11- the rarest thing along the great White Way. When the shock of the sight of so much water waa over. New York woke to tho fact that, for the first lima in Its career, there was fishing on Broadway. Just why fish shou.d he part of the city water supply remains a mystery. But boys with buckets caught two or tnree "shiners" In the flood. Grown folks they of tbs chLdlike heart got as muoh fun from watching the deluge as did the youngsters who weded therein. But it wasn't so funny to learn little ialen that any apartment above the seventh floor must gets its water supply In pa Is from some lower levels. Hers, indeed, was a touch of backwoods Muff in tho mldd.e of man's civilisation, in such a topsy-turv- y town rt fa nol suprising to find a bit of grim,' though unpremeditated, humor even in the Me- m Commencing Monday Voiles, Organdies, Batistes, Swisses, Flaxons, Marquisettes, Organdies, Embroidered Voiles, Embroidered Batistes, Persian Lawns, India Linons, Poplins, Gabardines, Crepes, Nainsooks, Longcloths, Cambric, Madras, Wash Satins, Piques, Beach Cloths, Dimities and Novelty Suitings, specially priced for this sale. OF New York -- i Delightfully becoming serviceable and appropriate are these new White Goods for summer wear; OUR DRUG STORE IS AT: 4 SOUTH MAIN ST. .V By JESSIE HENDEESON. ' Special Correspondent of The Sait Lake Tribune. . t .i Auto Strikes Motorcycle , Three Are Arrested Injuring Its Driver on Liquor Charges I. Evan Brown was OGDEN, June J. Two liquor raids were made by the police and sheriffs department at noon today on two soft drink parlors. The first raid was at the place of Alex Wilkinson and R. H. McCoy on Twenty-fourt- h street hetween Hudson k and Grant avenues Sheriff R. D and Deputy Sheriff O. H. Mohlman arrested the proprietors of the reeort after finding a pint of liquor. Ball of in 13A(t was posted for the appearance the city court Monday. C. Brrgtainoll, proprietor of the Ogden beer hall, on lower Twenty-fift- h street, was arrested by Detectives L. W, Pack, C- - E, Noble and Edward Butterfield and eeven pints of liauor seised. The accused Echo through Summit county is being man posted $308 for his appearance in condition by the court Monday. placed in first-dastate road commission through W. O. Stephens of Henpfer, state rood agent, School Among the improvements is the realignment of the grade frcUn Steamboat rock ' Again by miles. for a distance of about twenty-tw- o Nine miles of thde road ta through the v an yon, where the bed of Echo creek has OGDEN, June 3 W. Karl Hopkins, subeen changed ao that the highway now perintendent of the Ogden City schools, wn reelected for the next two years by parallels the Uniofi Pacific railroad track. the board of education, according to an Formerly the eufolst was compelled to announcement from the clerk's office toford Echo creek thirteen times in less day. .than nine miles. In changing tha course In reelecting Superintendent Hopkins of the etream Engineer Stephens used seven carloads of rock with which be the board complimented his efficiency in school the of the affairs handling waUa for the road. built retaining The board also selected text books for The rood in Summit and Morgan counsix and eight years, at ties from Echo to Ogden is in excellent periods of four, by law. The books are for all required into of amount due the great shape, from the first grade to the seterest the atate road commission and the grades county commissioners have given to the nior year of high school, matter of roads in the two counties. EASTERN TRIP PLANNED. OGDEN, June 3. A. T. MqCann, ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED. of the George A. Lowe company, Mr. and Mrs. C. N. LOGAN. June leave this morning for a two weeks Christensen- - announce the engagement of wdll in visit east. After visiting in Dentheir daughter, Gladys, to Saul FI Hyer ver and the Chicago he will go to Mansfield, The marriage will take of Lewiston. and Ohio, join Mrs. McCann, who ts visplace the latter part of June. daughter. Mis. Ienry B. iting their Mrs. McCann will return to Cta.. with her husband. GOING CAMPING? i.k' - Firemen here no easy time in this town. If it isnt a fire. It may be a summons to rstablfsh peace without victory. Seeing clouds of smoke and hearing cries for help, tha neighbors of James Murray turned in the alarm the other night. When two fire trucks, an engine, the chiefs wagon end. 1000 people had assembled. the first fireman to dash up the Stairs discovered that the sparks were who ly verbal. The Murray were arguing the theory of evolution or the nebular hypothesis or something. Anyway, they had become $n Interested In he that they had forgotten the supper which, burned to a crisp, suppuod u smoke. a Crime has been getting on as wall as could be expected, or, indeed, muoh bet-t- er than that Two llttla g.rls, aged 11 and 12, amazed detectives by confessing that for a leaf they had apent most of thetr time after school hours in picking pockets. Another of their little school playmates had taught them bow to do It. end it was awfiidy good fun. Thar were a'no the two little boy, aged 14 and IS. who lassooed a sedate citlsen of Brooklyn a ha wee sauntering down Main street, the way they had teen It done in the movies threw h m to the ground And emptied his pockets. CBut boys wlH be hoys, and nowadays girls will bs hoys alsot therafqrs, why should one he too critical! Federal Grand Jury Celled to' Meet June 19 . A special session of the federal grand jury waa cal.ed for June 19 by Judge Tillman D. Johnson of the. United States district court yesterday. A number of mattSrs will come before the Jurors and criminal eases which have acoumulatad since tha session In March will bs Investigated. Arguments for n nrvr trial of the case t viving children are: Robert Hicks of 6s t became known today, when tbe attend-la- g Lake, Mrs. iinlly Foots of Bofford, Arts., physician announced that tbe crisis Mrs. Nellie Green of Ogden, Mrs. Blanche release pending action for a rehearing of Macs, Mark, Hiiaa, Mary, Gladys and had passed and she was expected to recover. Mr. Moor, accompanied by tha case, after being sentenced to Frank Hicks of Kanab. her Alexander P. Moore, pub- eighteen months in ths federal prison At lisher of the Pittsburg Leader, recently Leavenworth. Defendants In the ease of the United returned from Europe, where she visStates against Mathew McBlaln Thom-c- o ited as a special agent of tho depart Be and other, charged with ulng the ment of labor. nail to aeeure member for an alleged Til baccalaureate service ef the fiaudulent Masonic order, were granted fifty-thircommencement annual of ve day in which to file a brief in their of Utah will be held this petition to retax the costs assessed by the University ths clerk following the trial. Ths gov. evening la tbo university gymnasium The Rev. John ernment is granted ten day from the building. time of thg filing of the defendants brief Carver, pastor of the Presbyterian in which to Ale a brief. church of Ogden and a member of the, The court yeaterdav appointed Thoma university board of regents,- will deliver Lund United State commissioner at tho traces) am reate sermon. His subject to fiU A vacancy created recently, j is: The Gift of Opportunity." Levi Edgar Young, professor of west-- ; of Haber L. Crow, convicted by n Jury of selling narcotics, will be heard on Juns 1, Crow furnished bond for his , U Baccalaureate Services Held This Evening to d Mo-da- Funetal Services Held for Pioneer of Kanab erg history at ths Utah university, will give the invocation; and the Bev, Frank wesley Bros, pastor of the Liberty will pronounco ' KAiNAB, June 3. Funeral services for Park Methodist church, Osorgs W. Hicks, who died at his horns the benediction, Other numbers on the program inIn Kanab on May 37 following an extended Illness, were held Sunday after- clude 8t. Johns Eve, by the Girls noon at 3 e'etoek under ths direction of Glee club of the university, nnder the Bishop Richard McAllister, direction of Mrs. Edna Evans Johnson:! Ths speakers were H. E. Bowman, election 'Hora Misties 0. H. DAHL (Sinieaglis) David L. Pugh, Z. K. Judd and Presi- sad (Bizet), by tho uniAdigietto dent W. W. Sesgnullsr. Music was furMiss wishes to announce the open-in- f nished by the choir. The opening prayer versity string quartet, directed by Our Praises Now We was offersd by Joseph Johnson and the Frances Grant; of a most moderaly the benediction was pronounesd by Prssident Proffer university (Baeb), ,by Israel H. Heston. Following the prayer shorn ad orchevtra, with Prof. Thoms quipped Shoe Repairin'? Chop. of dedication by Isaac Broww, ths body .Giles as conductor; And America, byj was interred la tha olty cemetery. tho eoBgreration. work, Nothing hut high-clas-s Mr. Hicks was bora at Fort Palmyra I Caps tod gbwns for tha graduating May 13, 1804. H was the son of Oeorge students arrived last night and will be ooupled with the best mate-rial- s, A. and Elisabeth Joiley Hicks. When he was 10 years of age his parents moved to i gives out this morning, starting at 9 is your guarantee of satthe southern part of ths stats, whers he oclock, in room 102 of tho Admlnistra-- . resided until the time of hia death. He tioa building on the university campus, isfaction. Prices most reasonwas married te lery B. Hoyt who still according to Lyaa W. Baybonld, senior survives him, at Glendale in 1878. They elate president. able. All work called for and livad in ML Carmel for s time, but later v moved to OrderviUe, where they resided ' LILLIAN RUSSELL ILL. , delivered free. for twenty years before moving l Kanab. ' PmSBUEO. Pa, Juno A Mr. LilBeeldas his widow, Mr. Hicks la surS33 SO. STATE. T7A3. lfCS. vived by Ale aged father, two sisters, two lian BusmU Moor ha been Very ill brothers And nice ohdren. Ths sur At her home here for several weeks, it ava,ioiioy |