OCR Text |
Show f 1 THE SALT LAKE TRIBUNE, V have comparison. Nothing the French faintdone to the Germans makes the est approach to a hat the enfranchisement of the slaves meant to ths Richfield Natatorium Opened a. 4 eouth. omkaw State Gives Game Department Lease on Bear Lands. River Bay SHOULOBE SET - Indefiniteneu of Amount Holds World Back and Riparian Rights to Area Resulting From Receding of Lake Challenged. Ths stats fish and game department, through D. H. Madsen commisaionrr obtained front John T. Old-r- o yesterday a lease d state land oommussloner on 2794 acres ot land ea of Bear Elver bay, under the meander ur-line as ftaed by United States these claims Commissioner Oldroyd ;ands for the state under a Instate the t4V, and also certain provisions state constitution. and game Inasmuch as the state fish the department has been offered by Hear River Silt Lands company a lease rights on an area pn the whkh includes these same lands at toOoO a year, it would appear that there is at least a conflict in claims As a matter of fact, the question of ownership in the state of reliction Isanda It accretion lands is involved. .question that has often been raised, und the present conflict in claims may lead to its imaJ determination in the Unjust to Vanquished. (OOStfcMM J the-shor- duck-shooti- courts. The shore of the Bear River bay was fixed by United Stales survey when the townships were platted many years ago. At present, for one or more of several possible reasons, the edge of the water is at a different place, and there is a ekrip of land of varying, though of considerable width, line which between the meander marked the shore as fixed by the survey and the present waters edge. THEORIES CONFLICT. Lands under water in the State have from statehood been administered by the stale, and, as a matter ot fact, the state general fund is now deriving some revenue in royalties from rentals of such lands. The state has claimed that Its right included lands under water as fixed by government survey and that, therefore, if the water receded or the land was built up above the waters edge for any reason the lands belonged, nevertheless, to the On the other hand, and according to another theory, the claim has been set that when the shore line recedes the boundary linee of property abutting on the shore are extended outward to the shore, and, presumably, such If the lake dried up entirely boundaries would extend to the middle of the lake. Conflicting claims arising from conto what is the flicting theories law on the matter have given rise to all Great Salt around controversies " Such an issue is ke and elsewhere the bottom of the conflict in claims to 'the lands on. Bear River bay. from the state land commissioner to the state fish and game for one vear at one-hdepartments an acreSriuch, with the filing fee, cent amounts in thexcae of the lands at present in controversy to $15 98 The lease obtained," said Uommieaioner MadsenN"by the state fish and game department that the lands thus under the meander line at the stretch in question miKht bo used as a public shooting ground ThcMnnds aie bekrw the surveyed lands on Bear River bay and th lease covers & nar row strip extending along the shore of the bay for About tflvw milos K will give hunters access to the marshes ail akmg this shore. , This department expects to construct a bridge over the east channel of the Bear river and to open up a public road to this shooting ground which will gne hunters of the state who may ha no conne tjon with a (private shortmg ilub an opportunity to hunt pn the entire varah land south of the Bear River bav from M iliard west for a distance of eight or ten miles We will have the bridge com- e alf wa-iX- FOLSOMS Self-Hel- p Grocery Reumberto brand, pint cane .......... .,..46c Lava Soap, 3 bar for . 5c Old Master Coffee, lb ......35c $5c jar large Green Olhsee .....26c 2te jar Stuffed or Green OHwm hc Macaroni, Spaghetti, Vermicelli or Noodles, pkg Good Coffee (pulverised), lb. Peas, 3 cans for ...6c ,.ise Box-eld- Salt Lakers Attend Ceremonies at New Richfield Bathing Resort. Special to The Tribane. 3 -- rThe new June natatorium was formally opened and presented to the citizens of Richfield laat night with appropriate ceremonies attended by approximately 3000 peothe "Bark ple, including the Farm" caravan from Salt Lake. the R. Clark Gam presented Mayor structure to the city-anita eitisens, and Superintendent of Schools Chria-tene- n made the acceptance speech. Parley Maglebv, who fathered the municipal bathing pool idea, was the master of ceremonies. The Richfield band, under the direction of John Hood, and the Arion quartet furnished musical numbers durmg the program. explained. C. W Knudon of Brigham C1t, A street dance followed as prssldent of the Bear River Silt Land company, has expressed the attitude of his company on the present issue in correspondence cf recent date. The company, it mar be explained, claims title to the land line of surveyed along the meander the bay at the region In question, and hence, also, to the lands between the meander line of the survey and the present water edge In his last letter to Commissioner Madsen, under date of June 7 Mr. Knud son writes, in behalf of his company of another ''With the Approach open hunting season, the question of duck shooting in the Bear river ba area comes once more Into the foreThe sporting publio, as you Absence of Mosquitoes Is ground are well aware, is looking to this section with keen anticipation, mingled a Commercial Advanprobably with some degree of uncertainty as to what the open season We believe that will hold foi them tage to the Community. it is not too soon to take up the matter now whiles there is yet time to work it out jratisfactorily "For two ears now we have made pr. 8 W. elch, state health combig concessions to the sporting pubauto our- missioner of Alabama and noted malic without compensation We do not belfeve, nor do thority on mosquito control and selves we feel, that your department laria, was a visitor in bait Lake last morning of us. that we should continue to Friday night and Saturday bear this burden alone And we do as guest of Dr T B Beattyon and his He is not believe that you expect us to Ashby D Cleveland. allow the continued unrestricted use way to a convention in Sah Franof our property as during the past cisco In an interview with a Tribune retwo vears and thus Imperil our rights therein and lead us directly into se- porter yesjerday morning Dr Welch be avoided which should conflict emphasised the fact that mosquito rious control was a financial investment LEASE IS OTFERED. which brought returns in a monetary "We are willing to ftase to the sense as well as freeing a community state all our titled lands and ripa- from disease The condistribution rian rights In townships 8 and 9 trol of the mosquito completely as toa 4 3 and west, from orth, ranges incredible an profit pest brings an Intensive jear to yearof until a the advertising gained the property can be any district, such a condition is advanSuch development we through in undertaken the growth and developbelieve laNnot far off, as we know tageous of a attracting you are working toward the making ment tourists community and vacation seekers many of a great pirfftm shooting grounds of of Alabama the elate In speaking ourwe near and river bav area, the his work was acselves have both eastern and western In which much of I)r Welch declared the complished capital making investigation of surthe 4 controlled moquito both In addition to this, property as a pest end disease distributor, ard veys are now being roaato deter- the advertisement which towns remine the feasibility of reclaming the ceived from being pest free was a area in question But until subfi de- tremendous assc business Traveling velopment is began, or as long men going from place to place we own the property, we should ised Alabama as being a place be asked to furnish the public with was indeed a comfort ere great shooting ground without com-- i Were sleep convinced that any mosquito pensatioh from the improveaside "To bring this matter definitely be- campaign, ment ofhealth conditions and the to our defore vou, we will lea oiMjvts his real financial partment or to any other reponiole saving worth recommend organization vou ma In cooperation with the Interna for duck hooting purposes during the tional Health beard, we are doing exvear li29 all the titled an6 riparian tensive work upon malaria control in lands of the B ar River &ilt I and? Aiabama at the presedtstime. Lands "Company lying wet of range 2 west which were worthies swamps oro and squth of the Bear river, with the being reclaimed and madeNValuable exception of 410 93 acres in section through drainage. In dramage'wpera 6, township 9 north, range 4 west, tions we have a definite prograrTv of for a nominal sum of $6000 This procedure. We first locate the bree will Include the right to the Reeder place and habitation of the mosbridges and to passage over the irtg we procure from the then quitoes; Reeder property, and the right to a competent engineer to superbuild roadways and construct what state of the detail the vise bridges may be necesarv, and to The property owners whoundertaking. will be dimake additional shooting grounds rectly benefited by the drainage wherever desired on th lands in then organised IntoTwwhody, wmchare is vohed in the lease But we shall taxed proportionately for the work require proper respect for our pas- The amount In manner received ture. livestock and improvements on is supplemented by sumsthisfrom .the &ald lands Such an arrangement state and International Health board &n will entirely remove friction be When territory has ben tween our company and the sporting drained as the thoroughly as possible we public and will definitely settle this institute a pvtem of oiling, bv which question at least for this year. If oil is sprrhkled upon the surface of we still own the property next vear all areas undrainable It is in this we shall be willing to enter into that the control of the mossimilar agreement at a price to be fashion Is malaria handled and in Aladetermined upon before the opening quito bama." of the 1924 season "We believe you appreciate oar position in this matter we Free Methodists Reelect are placing mrUhe lease ThF'prir for this year Four Present Bishops is but a fraction of its real worth to the public The entire amount can be collected at the Reeder bridge Mich , June 23 The rORtNNA, if necessary, as the number of sports- four of the Free Methodist men who will shoot in the Bear rivr churchbishops of North America acre reelect-e- d marshes will be larger this jear than terms of four years by the genever before. This will place the bur- eralfor here today They are conference den where it belongs and will relieve Walter A Seiiew, Jamesus from the burden of furnishing the Bishops N Y ; William Pearce, Evanstown, public at our expense with a public ton. Til ;'W H. Clarke, Rom. N. Y shooting grounds It will also relieve and D. S Warner, Olenellvn, Ilf. ua from an almost Intolerable posiA resolution adopted says that the tion created when public sentiment church is in "hearty sympathy with attempts to violate private property W llliam Jennings the fundarights, as has been the case In the mentalist movementBryan, and others to past such an in the scripfaith public "If arrangement as we account of creation and the orihere propose is entered into now, and turaland development of man." proper publicity given it, the increase gin in the sale of hunting licenses will, SAUNDERS TROUBLE ADJUSTED. we believe, be several times the MEMPHIS. Tezm.. June HZ.J I.1 amount involved in the proposed leas counsel for Clarence Saunders, and this in addition to the tolls that McRee, stores. can be collected "at the bridge." president of Piggly Yv iagi Inc., announced today that aattsfac-tor- y adjustment" had been made of suits filed in Memphis and New Orleans by Sidney W. Sonera, New Orleans banker, against Mr. Saunders The suits, which Involved a note for (30,000, said to have been executed by Mr. Saunders, were filed several weeks ago. The petition filed her alleged that the note was overdue and unpaid. RICHFTKLD, 'to attitude -- 25c 20c Hoody's Peanut Butter, H ... Guaranteed Butter, lb ....40c McDonalds Cocoa, lb. ...10c Mab Cleaner $ for 25c Kline's Sweet Chocolate for 10c Ballantlne Malt gyrup 45c j Best Hope, lb 35c Bottle Caps, lb (1 gross) 35c Minute Gelatine, pkg ,..10c 24 mse tans Tomatoes .10c Borden s Malted lb 46c Lunch Sets, containing plates, 6 1 ...... table clothL, . .10c napkins. Pork and Beans, can X. . 6c 2 lbs for 55c bottle 15c Large Ketchup Toilet Soap, 4 kinds . for 6c . Quality High Patent Flour ..$140 HiUVnia or Blue Pine Tea .... 26c Wax Lunch Paper 7 rolls for . 25c Ginger Snaps or Graham Crackers, lb 16c Breakfast Bacon by piece, lb. 22!c . 16c jar Preserve 26c 3 for 10c Fresh Chewing Gum v . ...10 for 36c Soap Potato Chips, large pkg ,r....1Fc 6c Medium 4c Small 10c Corned Beef Hash or Sc Hamburger 36c can Roast Beef or Roast 1 5c Mutton Mason Jar Rings, dosen ........ ( Mason Jar Caps, dosen ,26c Kerr Self Sealing Jar IAds 25c for Mawn Jars, I dosen Prince Albert or Velvet . .2 for 26c Nucoa, ..2 Clean-Eas- .... 127 "In this movement the deportment baa the assistance and backing ml sportsmen s associations throughout the state and inclusive of those of Boxelder county. Indeed, this action, in my opinion, meags much to county, since it makes available in that county the best shooting in the state and one of the best in the UnitI believe ed States. Jndeed, that there is better shooting on these marshes every dav during the open season than there is continuously anv place else in the United States, and the area is practically limitless, including as It does hundreds of square miles of shooting grounds. The claim has been made that the lands in question are highly valuable, and one figure is quoted of $100,000 as the worth of these lands. However, so far as the state records show, it is declared, there is nothing to indicate that taxes have ever been on suih paid on these lands, oreither on any other a valuation as that valuation. -- Olive Oil, imported, East Second South Street Positions Open FOR TWO AUTOMOBILE SALESMEN WITH SALT LAKE COMPANY HANDLING STANDARD MAKE . ' OF-CA- R i. wft Experience- and local acquaintance necees&ry. We desire a permanent addition to onr force and want steady, reliable men. ' E-5- 4, TRIBUNE. KANSAS MAN HONORED. ITHACA, N. Y, June 23 Dean P. T. Walker of the University of Kansas, today waa elected president of tho National Society for the Promotion of Engineering Education, whkh concluded its convention at Cornell f - APPLY BOX fW III Ou.) 'y (doted and thS road open before the , shooting .season this fall, . university today. R, H. Ferguson, Uninamed an versity of .Nebraska,, vice president. PRELATE BESKINS POST. 23 The . VtCTtmiA, B. C, June Right Rev Alexander MacDonald, has bishop of Victoria, resigned and the pope has accepted the resignation, it became known here today coincidentally with the announcement that the commit ore of the diocese last night had elected Vonslgnor J, Leterme, domestic prelate, to he adi ministrator ad interim. to. ,11 SUNDAY MORNING, JUNE 24, 1923. German peopl do sympathi sometimes almost to th point of p tonal pain. But it Isnt merely because the French went into the Ruhr. with them because of I, sympathise the way they were formerly misled and exploited by the kaiser and the Prussia junkers. And even more do I have sympathy for the German people because of the way they are now being exploited even worse by a brutal group of industrial junkers, Bchoidt junkers, factory Junkers, as they are called in distinction from the brot Junker, the landowning junkers. gf the kaisers regime. It is these "big business" junkers (only Infinitely more ruthless than anything we ever charged against our American "big business") It is these who are chiefly responsible for the action that brought the French into the Ruhr and for most of the rest of Germany s recent troubles. It ie this group of profiteers who now have a grip on the German people and A relation to the German government not unlike tjhat the kaiser formerly had it is just beginning to be realised how these new industrial junkers are exploiting the German people through the depreciation of the mark It ie beginning1 to be suspected, also, that responsible for the continued depreciation of the mark, that a hidden hand in have had they bringing tt About. This is so wicked a to he thing that perhaps it ought-no- t said without being proved, and to prove Just what persons and cliquss brUght about the German inflation must await careful investigation In any event It is certain that through the depreciation of the mark the. profiteers have grown incredibly rich and have been able to exploit the German masses cruelty It is to the poisoning of its currency, the depreciation df the mark, that Germanys recent and present misery Is due. less than to the presence of the French in the Ruhr ' WEALTH -- INTACT. Also, all the wealth is still in Germany. It was- - not destroyed Germany ns a whole lost nothing through inflation. The wealth Is still there The mass of German people who are entitled to the utmost sympathy, must charge that up against ths unscrupulous leaders whom they trusted to their cost. It is not to be charged against the conquerors, nor to be considered In the eoet of defeat. Further, in the case of our south we destroyed, I think, more property and, more values than even the total amount of reparations demanded from Germany. We freed the slaves If there were 4 006 00 rf them, and if worth $I0F ech. they were alone is the equivalent of $4,000,000,000. In addition, the freeing of the slaves mads land In the south almost worthless. Land which under thfc slavery svstem was worth $100 an acre became worth $5. How many billions that meant it would be difficult to compute. Worst f ill, we made the elavfet masters oVer their former ownera What that meant in humUiatlon, distress and destruction to the losers of the civil war is a thine beyond gay tht spot IN STORE, a dGd'MtEPf -- TO PAY. Germany has not begun to pay the amount of reparation she ought to begun to endure the' suffering that has followed defeat in other wars only a fraction the siae of the one she started. Practically all the suffering from war that Germany has endured so far is the loss of life and treasure during the fighting That has been merely the cost of making the war fehe has hardly begun to suffer the cost of losing it The lives and treasure were gone before the She would have lost fighting ended all that if the outcome had been In her favor She has jet to experience what a nation must expect to endurt as the consequences of defeat SITUATION DIFFERENT. It will be useful to compare what has been done to Gernunj so far with what we did to the south after our own civil war The difference fn the circumstances the greater wickedness and the greater cupidity of Germany I need not enlarge upon The south did not invade the north She did not plan the war nor prepare for it The south fought for a conviction, not for conquest She fought merely for the right to go her own wav and live her own life in the wav she wanted to live it within her own borders However I need not enlarge upon the gi eater sinfulness of Germanv tompared to our south What I wanj to point out Is how much iess Germanv has paid as the price of losing the war than our own south paid as the price of losing the civil war e Germanv complains to heaven at the end of four and a half year after she was beaten a small portiolKof her soil is occupied by th conqueror; troop. We had troops in the south ten years after ths war ended, as lata as the election of jid there is yet livHayes, in 1876 ing. and high in ower in the Rea mamnamed Senator publican party, Lodge, who made his fjrHt marked Impression on the nation byadvocat-In- g that the federal troops should be bark to the south at a time, in the early 90s. w ben the war Pearly thirty years past Further, nearly every rran in the south lost practically every dollar he had The demand on Germany fur reparations does not approach anything even remotely resembling that Everv dollar In the south became worthless piece of paper So did every bond of the southern government Now, do not make the mistake of comparing this thing that happened to Confederate money and Confederate bonds with what has happened to German marks and German bonds It is true that German marks and German bonds arg worthless But It is not ths conquerors who made them so It was not defeat that caused (hat. What has happened to the German mark is merely that one group of the German people namely for the most port, the dishonest and profiteers and industrialists ha stolen every mark that belonged to the more honest sod ingenuous portion of the German people But all that has happened within the boundaries of Germanv Those losses, due to the- - traneference of wealth from one- - .portion of the Ger man people to another, and all the misery they entail they were not enforced upon Germany by the victor. be-s- $T1LL GERMANY , COMPLAINT WARRANTED. We in Ajnerica, and the rest of a world that wants peace, have a right to complain about what France la doing in the Ruhr, but Germany has no title to complain To Germany it is merely one of the consequence 1914 of the atep she took in When a people makes war tt most expect to abide by the outt'ome Even looking at it as a gamble, they must take account of the chance that thev may lose and be sportsmanlike enough to stand the consequences Any nation that takes up the sword must understand that failure is going to be followed by some unpleasant results In the case of Germany, she hasnt aftlE But to the American readef the comparison need not be pursued further To anyone with knowledge of what went a In the south for forty years foi lowing the civil war the parallel or, rather, the lack of a parallel needs only to be suggested. Tbrve is mill a lot of grief due to he must expect to suffer Germany It. Whatever appeal she mar ever hope to make to the respect and symwill pathy of the world she outragedwithbe promoted if she endure it out whining or tryfhg to evade it AH this is said with full knowledge or, at least, with the conviction on the part of the present writer that the original crime of making the war was done leas by the German people than by the kaiser, the Junkers that whole cabal ot monarchist, junker and militarists who misled and deludBut a people ed the German people frntst expect to pay the toei of being docile to such leaders Germany made war against Her neighbors fche did all the fighting on her neighbors' land Her own land fs practically untouched by the sword Her factories are intact Wcr home be allowed to escape without paying adequate reparations U wbuld be a crime only short of her firt crime It would be an Invitation to make war are untouched If now she should again. ABLE pay land can pay The new and surprising fact one discovers in Europe now i this Germany today Is able to pay more reparations than she oould have paid the day of the armivtioe By the operation of inflation Germany's capacity to pay, her economic enefficiency, has been enormously GerKvery corporation in larged off its many has been enabled to pay bonds with a song kvery city and in Germany has local government been enabled to do the same. It is a crime thab it should be so, but the crime is wholly within the boundaries of Germany. It is a crime on the part of one group of Germans against another group The allies have had nothing to do with that crime But most assuredly the allies are concerned with the eoonomlr results of it The net result of Inflation, ot the depreciation of the mark, ha been to make Germany tha economic unit in the world Her factories, her business corporations, have no overhead charge of That debts or bonds or interest alone is a handicap in favor of Geroutto to her enable sufficient many strip other countries in international trade competition Hut, further than that, the factories of Germany have become physically enlarged and improved as the consequence of Inflation. A factory owner, a business man. made 9money One What should he do with It thing he must not do was to lot tt If he left it in pile up in the bank the bank it dried up and became worthless In the process of deprecatAnother thing the ing the currency business man might have dona-undnormal conditions would have been to Invest it in bonds. But boudfe were in the same shape as the currenrv Because of inflation, money Invested In bonds shriveled up overnight The one course for the business man to take with hi money and his profits was to lay them out again, to As the value buy things with them of the mark went down the value of ie way to beat the things went up game was to buy things And so the German business man or factor owner made additions to his plant He bought more land and more goods. He built additions to the factor) He bought improved machinery The net result is that todav Germany is better equipped for economic competition with other countries than Bv that same she ever was before token she is better able to pav reparations. better able to restore the damage she dd to Frnm and Belgium, able to pav a larger amount of reparations than was regarded as possible at the time of the peace conference. To let Germany escape paving adequate reparation would not only be a failure to penalise her adequately and Justly for the military war she made in 1914, but it would also enaole her to start off with an immense advantage, ah intolerable and unjust advantage. in the econoiMc competition with France, Belgium and the rest of the world that is Just ahead of ua 18 MATTER OF JUSTICE. One thing, however Germany is clrsrv entitled to She has a right to know the amount of reparations sisn of required of her It is not the the reparations, it is the indetermi-natencs- s of the sum. that is holding the world back Germany is entitled to be told bv France, or by someone, just what sum she must pa. and is entitled to the aaiurante that as soon as he pays It or gives adequate guaranties for the future pament of it she shall be free But that is what France docent want to do Frame doesn t want the amount fixed France has preferred to keep the amount ot the reparations 8h wants a prma indeterminate nent mortgage on Germany When Secretary Hughe proposed that the amount of reparations be fixed by an impartial tribunal, France refused to assent. It is the fact that the Pari peace conference left the amount of reparations indeterminate and that the amount remains indeterminate that is an injustice to Germanv of which Germany can just v complain It puts Germany in the same position as the Irish farmer under the old landlord system The more the renter made the more the landlord took from him at the end of the ear If e farmer worked hard improved the iatid, repaired the buildings, then the landlord raised the rent He put a Bv to penaltyNm thrift and work amount orork could the renter evr hope to be free of his burden That is mhatM'Yance ha wanted to That is what the do to Germany Versailles treaty made it possible to do to Germany. France has wanted to keep Germany in ffxpermanent state of economic tmpotemiKas well as military Impotence One wb understand why France should wamto moet-efficio- If be got (he goods, bcTl defrrerth arico. Good merchandise and exwieker suites were of expressly for ii?n-doors m Kuinmcr weather, Thor and are comfortable, stylish These V 4 m tha pert attention to your two bright tide of the name ahield. both. FOB SUMMER WEATHER fneh-tono- oit So if a coal dealer pcculiseB on Lion and Burnxright Coals, yon can act it down that be pot a lot of ntrea on nerricR. He exactly be pro-tect- a joa oo both hawr etneral beautiful ETudes amt variolio on hand at present at prices that are unWe usually low Lawn Swing, Porch Swing,' Conch Hammocks, Camp Stooia, etc. v Oran Bogs, 9.50 " Fill yoar bin with lion nxLbot' for free-homi- Headquarters for Majestic Range coaL Borasright Toys the Year Around Where the Price is Alwxya Right ae bent and t eoooany. Cm lang-bnnno- g a UONOQt&LCQL OgdovUtah Wye can also nnder- But do this Htand why thte courso should be optier many but by posed, Pot only by else who Britain, and by everybody back to world wants to get the (fOM. .. normal the France must consent to making n that amount fixod a reparations Incorttlngenrv Franco baa a. Tight to as sist that the amount be te large out g.t the the last farUapK possible i of Germany ,' .o ill be doing amount ie fixed France to Germany no unprecedented cruelty if she insist, on ntai ug hi the Ruhr eutlefac-toril- y ur until the amount ie ptK" guaranteed COAST BROKER FAILS. BAN FRANCISCO, June 23 A petition in bankruptcy URNS said was filed today by Charles M Hmith Han Francisco broker who listed liabilities of (400,000. The principal creditor is the Bank of haiv, which hold -claims for ( 36 000 Smith listed seta of (SO.iiOO in securities. er I McMillan Starts r to Resume Labors in Arctic Region WISCA88ET, Maine, June fBy the Associated Press 23 Cap- Donald B McMillan sailed auxiliary today In the 115-to- n schooner Bowdoin to resume hie tain scientific work and explorations the Arctic Work begun on the Baffin Expedition, from which he returned last Bepiem-be- r with the greatest collection of scientific apd magnetic observations ever made In the Arctic, will be continued in Ellesmere Land, northern Greenland. While he expect to return in (teen months, tar McMillan may e compelled to atay until the fall of 192. , The Bowdoin is expected 10 reach Etab about August 2ft. At Cspe Sabine the vessel will he allowed to frees in for thF winter, ee miles from the North in Pole Th principal exploration will be a dor team trip over the ice cap of Ellesmere Land, an elevation of 0000 XeeL and down the other side into Eureka sonnd, where big coal deposits "which MacMillan found in 1914 will be Among the other Investigations to be made by Dr. MacMillan, he will seek dua to aid in a determination whether there is any foundation for the theory which has been advanced in some Quarter that another Ice age is impending. i. . I use u-- ' Dont TryWithout It' f4 Get f.ieexas.e t M&mm to a ,'irT ways and culverts The principal Items of work are apa follows proximately com rete pavement 36oO iiq yds 2170 Un ft curb and gutter 16 000 sq ft sidewalk Flans and specifications are on file with arl Nyman engineer for the Utah, and may dty of HUpr Helper be obtained from him on depositing five ( go 00 dollars The right is reserved to reject gnv H4976 end nil bid FREE Eottmafcen gtraioa wtrlnyoriU6tn I tutor. FHDHB WAA. CIOS. HLccraio co, NOTICE OF INTENTION TO AMEND THE ARTICLES OF INCORPORA-TIOOF THE WESTERN LOAN A BUILDING COMPANY AT AN AD. JOURNED SESSION OF THE 1923 ANNUAL STOCKHOLDER S' ' MEETING. Notice is hereby given that at an adjourned session of the 1923 regular annual meeting of the stockholders of the Western Loan and Building company, to be held, at the office of the 9 Hast First South company, treet, Salt Lake City, Utah, on Mon9th the day, day of July, 1923, at $ o chck p m , the following resolution to amend the articles of incorporation of aawi company will be introduced considered and voted upon, m iolved. That the articles of incorporation of the W estern Loan and Building company be and the same, hereby, are amended by increasing the authorised capital of said company, from the present limit of fifty million dollars to sixty million dollars and no that section one of ihe fifth article of the said articles of incorporation as and if amended will rend as follows. ARTICLE FIVE Section 1 The kmount of the capital stock of this corporation sliall he sixty million dollars to be divided into six hundred thousand shares of the par value of $100 00 each. Tha balance of article five remaining and reading as heretofore. This notice is given and published pursuant to an order of the boart of directors of said company. Datedhat Sait Lake City, this 8th day of June, 1923. II M IL LUND Secretary Along an not worth th effort, not worth oid-- f uhionad wMhday, to toy mod get, aloof wlthonf tm electric waatur. EepecUUr now that yoo at m hiWto m It NOTICE TO CONTRACTOR8, Cit of Helper, Helper, Utah Foaled proposals will be received bjr tlie city council of Helper, Utah, until 8 oclock p m , July 12, 1923, And at that time publicly opened, for the construction of concrete pave-t- nt nt on Having DHtrkt No 1 and for the construction of corn ret sidewalks according to CMtv ordinance No 27, with all necessary grading and construction ofurbs, gutter, drive- it Responsible, ' man for State Dis- ' Nationally Advertised Product QUALIFICATIONS : Capital Required, $5000.00 Business References h339S PUBLIC NOTICE O REPAYMENT OP SCHOOL BONDS-Notic- e is hereby given thkV Carbon county school district. Carbon bounty. Utah, will call in and does hereby call In for pawment Former Wellington school district Carbon county, Utah, bonds amounting to $10,6o0.4dated May X, 19U. due May 1, 1931, optional after ten years, drawing interest at the rate of 6 per cent per annum, payable semiannually, in denominations of S100Q 00 each; And: Former Price school district Car bon county, Utah, bonds, amounting to $2Q, 000, dated May 1 1915, due May 1, 1935. optional after five years, drawing interest at the rate of 6 per cent per annum, payable semiannual ry, in denominations of $1000 09 each. Funds will be on deposit at the Price Commercial A Savings bank. Price, Carbon county. Utah, for the payment of said hoods, upon presentation. on and after July L 1923. experienced business tributor of Organizing Ability For appointment with factor representative m K Newhouse Hotel, Monday and Tuesday. ' phone petition tn subject certain property to the paymenttof an Inheritance tax, tiled by Harvsy il. Cluff attorney ,cn-erof the ntat of Utah, in the abov entitled matter. It hereby ordered that Nathaniel H. Stone of Milton, Massachusttfl, Charles K. Perkins, Ddwm J Smith and William F. McFarland of Bur-- 1 hurt on, Iowa, and such other parties daimtns an Interest therein, be sad they ar hereby cited to appear beBOARD OF EDUCATION OF fore tha abov entitled court on th CARBON COUNTY SCHOOL tlth day of July, 1923, at ( o eiock CARBON DISTRICT. p. m., and show cause the and there COWAN. rTAH COUNTY. tho- property described and rewhy Clerk. , (Seal, By CARL K. MARCU8EN, (SeaLj ferred to in said potiuoA soould not T 'Palmer,' Deputy Clerk By President. bo to th paimeot of the subjected PetiR. A. McBroom, Attorney for And Ida R. Tanner Clerk. H3438 h3942 state inheritance tax, and whv a comtioner. mission should not be to the PLOEATE AYD OUAEDIAHSUIY VOTICE. ' I inheritance appraisers of halt Lcae (Consult county clerk or th mparti? alga fr tor fnrttitof Information I IN THE THIRD JUDICIAL Dis- county, directing them, an ourh to trict court of the ttat of Utah, in appralo all of said prope-- t) iNTirk district courICprS: and ti tt for Salt Lake county In ths basis for determlnluf the amount u; bnte division, in and (or Salt Lake matter of the estate of Hoary B inheritance taa due thereon county, state of Utah In tk matwa. M. M CRK A, Jti.rn 5 Beott, dectaaed, Order to show ter of the estate of Walburxa Lam' cause. , Vneradorf, deceased. JvotFe. June, (toted thin ng Tha petition ot Herma ILtrma, ex' h ecutnr of tha catata of Watbuna Dammeradorf, d ersaa.il, praying fur the aettlement of (Inal account of said Herman Hanna executor, and for th distribution of tbn residue ot tn estate to th persons entitled, also fur dlscharn of executor, has been set (of hearing oo Friday, tha 99th day clock p. m ot Juns. A. D. 1922. at th county eourthouaa in th courtIn room of said court Salt tAka City, Balt Lake county Utah. Witness th clerk of sakl court with th ooal theroof affixod, this 13th day of June, A. D. 19:3 al 1 all, I- - -- aad-fil!- C-- ll JL rl- |