Show - ' ! t''''''!tI'r:3::'t':t' ''' " -- : - -- ''- ! --- -- : 434- t' pw41 - i: it'-- 4: - Adb I i : v:--- a 43 - - ''''" '' - 4 !"4 ' i41)-:41)-40- :': - -: ''- - - : : ': i73:t!-' 4': r " i 4: - - ' - ' ' 4 !' ' ?:::rf ! - k' e ' ' T: ee i e F - ' - e - ' t: le - ' e - rk D i' ' ti y e ei - 71- i:-' eel eaele ‘' e-:- e - z - -- A ee ee el -- 7eed-:“lei- - ' ::Ei-:1'- - 1 : - 4!'41- ' 0 I ' retee-- te - v - r- - — ( ' - - ' :' 4) ' ''' -- i 4 ' t ii' I1: '" " ef:1 it t - - t 1:! A' i t ' ' 7 : 4 - l': - -e I'' 'It''' ee' 1 1 :'''' IX 'l if ee ee ' 0'1tniL ' "1 I'''''''" :''c: '4: - : ' - 3 ' 41 e :4- 4'e - t re eee 004 - 1 !-- eti44 It 4 4irl"' ''4''' ''' --4 s !40ki'veit107-- ' 1441 ' t eihie le - ere l above Wasatch boule- - - - A tt The only one who knew the old man was the landlord and he could give no name of friend or relative He did know some- thing about the old man how- - - Ik e 4' " s' te b T4 i —71-- -- 71- - A 4 - ' eeeeete O k ' ' ''' ''' 1f f Nr! o "' 3 :' eee tee tr ' - 4fp ' -- 4' e-- 4 4' t 1--: if t 1114 1 sl!crt prayer vies said and Itl -- - 11Parthrrnktnr - ' '''''-n- ' ' ' i: : -- - - ' - ''' etee- e i t7-- 't'- - ' '''' t' '4 ' - e i11 44-- 4 '' 4 A of medicine ' ' 4' -- '''''' rl ' '''''' 14 -- pp 1 - ''4:- - 40:“ ADVTIITTSrmENT ! '''''' 4 '- ' 24- t I i'" 4 -- ' '' - e ' 1 ' '4 '? -- - - V!''''''' '''' ' ''' I r men' etays Mr psborne "there are a few wonien and very rarely a child We have 4 special little cemetery for ba- bies tip thre IN'n a child dies in a family of little means they can buy a baby-sin- gle up there It's cheaper than a regular plot" Not all peorle buried In pot- ter's field are friendless how- ever Here and there you well a bouquet of wilted home- grown flowers in a glass fruit ear There are one or two flat marble markers in the field above the highway Sometimes there ere even very expensive floral arrangements on these peepers graves One recent fit- neralI brought forth a profusion of flowers valued at an estimat- - '5':''4'' ' '' "''' " e ieleezer-e- 7 111 e"' : ii' 1'4'4 4''- 1V - i ltfr tee 44A:41' Vioitt'1i'el4-- zee t - e et F 4:'241 :" 0 erft41 0 - ' 4 :::I -tI :st- "V- 4—r ' g- 474' 4w ii i 0 t I" t 4-e--- - 11-400- 4 - 'ee i) k 4' '' It '"" - eeteree ' 14 i 4"eeeefirete t eek) ' P4ilr je et' r: - : - -- e tee : '1'111'11 it e00-- ikel ' 1 if ' ' ' : ' e ! ' - f- e ' :: : -- ''7"- 'e : ge:--0 ' -- eeeet I ' - k ee — - -- In aome cities criminals are in potter's tell but in Salt Lake that isn't true Until -A criminal who died in rtiS011 Was cremated in lime but !IOW his body may be claimed by friend or relative and given tiny kind of burial the claim eeeee -- e ::r ' ie !''! - "- - — ere 'ke ' r:: !!" A ' :: ' )1 ' I ' t''4' ‘ :1 efete 43'''' 1 Aimee 0 il'' lisN '4 '' 4 !it! :: ' 44): '''s'' 1 : e 4 a - 4iessiessekt ) ie i4 ''' 7 '''7:'- '''4-- le 'etly V 7'' sk ''' ' - e '' - e lir"' '1''': e- : "to: e re- " r''' -- " " ' e er-- 's'e e ja 11nr - e e 4 i1 c §1 ' I -- 1 1f o 1to ' I bne d ' : e:11 "TA fel ti 4:t11-f:-r---'wemrnnr4041!!2:P' z wt15rv't The city cemetery has had several potter's field& This one is the second' and la now all grass covered with only a few stones ante desires flying Can Re Expeneive It tan- - be expensive- Dyiog rage Ttreee-elir- '1: ' et kt te expanse of green lann unmarked by headstones of other sign that the poor have been buried here I 1 : Je :: e' '"'":i'li ''"eseleee oill 0 ':' 0& ' 1 : '- i' el WV ' 1 ' - t 17: 1 e C:!'11-1- The first potter's Held situated at the bottom of the city cemetery The area now shoua as an a 7: can 'cost up to $10000 $120 is the maximum the county will ' burial anti if somepay for one is willing to spend something the amount is reduced accordingly That isn't very much for the average is between $350 and $150 plus clothes plot and marker The sum isn't nearly enough to have a person cremated When relatives of the Japanese and Chinese paupers find this out they always pass the hat and manage to raise burned for that's the ix'ay they prefer Most of these pieces of human flotsam have tragic lives They have been disowned by their families and many of them are alcoholics Some die in the county hospital some out on the street and quite a few in cheap dirty hotels and rooming houses No one wants them No one Zs:0 one is sorry claims them they're gone "Most peop:e buried here ate --------- --- :t--- kz': ?"-:- - 4 with a well-kebed in the center The ciinetery grew around it and now its in one of the very best locations Another plot is lined with trees and the rolling green lawn is broken only by an occasional headstone The writing on the soft white stone is almost completely obliterated On one here is a string of Japanese characters - '' - 4 ''r i"" - ' l'ir !tJ n74 foo"' toe vl tract I -- : "it-7- '4'ire'" ''' '''''''''''"'" - - potter's field" The very first county burial plot is now a ered flower — t''''41'''--- ': "Z- ( - tfA was a millionaire At least he had iv lot of money at one time in his life Be was a miner and made a fortune but he lost it all before he died When it came time to bury him nobody wantekto pay so hes somewhere in for it' --- T - ) obi he 1 " ' t ' i '°‘ - '''' ' The school takes quite a number of bodies every year Each cadaver is studied by four students and the dissection of it is complete in two quarters The rest are buried in potter's field This is a strip of land in the City cemetery set aside by the county for those who need such charity The name is taken from - 343--"1- - te - -- ''''''' continues "there aren't nearly as many paupers now as thcre used to be In the old days we used to bury two or three a day but nowadays' everybody's i got money" There are Jery few stories known about people buried in potter's field but Mr Osborne thinks one of the old fellows Schooll Takes Bodies --- 0 - 4 tA t seee' : ' 4 4 L - 'V '11''7t' '' "You state university whenever there is a convict or person to be bured at public expense The body must be properly embalmed and kept for sixty days If no one claims it then it can be used by the school '''' '' A ' ' - pl 11'11! 4 roupers Grow fund There is a punlic sc'hool law which says the person in charge must give notice to the dean of the school of medicine at the '' dr 441412: Ir hural plots" after the burial costs were 'deducted reverted to the general ' 'eeseeee e - 4°4 Oee e-- t: ‘ 1 'I r 11AWI e --- - - cemetery ertployi for 39 years will tell you there are four potter's fields in the cemetery Two of them are grass covered and as well taken care of as any graves Someday the other two will be cared for in the same way including the newest pot- ter's Held above the boulevard Cut they aren't Called 'pot- ter's field' anymore" says Mr Osborne "tho"re called county have no money to bury but I would like his him personal things" Among his things wtSe a gold watch several war bonds and some mining stock However these things tannot be turned over to heirs untill a bunal receipt is presented The niece who would bury him therefore missed Out on les mining stock and war bonds which wore worth'several These were hundred 'dollars tur-oeover to the county end son-in-la- t - 47 :1' e: fi — 4 - I ' 4 ' 01 i:4 -- -I' 1 - ' - A find man was living thld back of a store 0 - Sr F 1 ' - ' : - mi - :1 1 just such a graveyard in Jerusalem Christ was about to be buried there before Joseph of Arimathaea offered his tomb Herbert Osborne of 801 Gen- - solicited orders for souvenir pen- (Os When he (Led the police found a note that he would like his niece notified They told the girl her uncle was dead and she said by Tin :i'- ' t - e'i e A eefe e:eereeeel 41: le e t 11t: fr Marion Nelson Another alone in ' atarved to death" Mrs Jarvis sent the voucher to the county auditor who in s A ''' t eek - - -- '4:' !rs:I-''ei'!- ' By be-e- n Sentenced to Prison 4 ''ie en post and a few dead sprigs in a Mason jar set the note of I whatever pomp and circumstance there is ghee a poor man dies Jarvis has a record of thielyeix' such unwanted people so far this year who have - buried in potter's- field Most of them are old men The one infant buried there was deserted by its father and the mo ltuer had no money to pay for burial ' The Phone Rang One old lady Mrs Jarvis remembers did have relatives a on and two daughters Finally she Contacted the son who was working as a deputy sheriff in ‘ but he wasn't inSeattle terested He didn't have the time tor the money to bury tris mother Mrs Jarvis found that one daughter was dead but did learn the address of the living one She sent a telegram She heard nothing Finally one day the phone rang and it was the husband of the dead da4hter He had learned of the mother's death from the other daughter and was willing to come and fury the body So this lonely old woman was buried by a her relative seems several years ago the old fellow had been involved In a mail fraudi The landlord thought he had given back all - the money but in spat of that the old man had been sentencd to two years in prison in Washington state He had served his term and returned to his native Utah with just $17 Then he filed for relief but had to tell them out of the state for he halt two years Because of his absence he had lost his Utah reit- idence and was not eligible fer old age welfare Mrs Jarvis added "A man does not lose his residence if he is in prison but this old - man- was too proud to mention where he had been" He had no one to help him The said "I think he landlord ' i1:47 '- 4'' 4 z b- f'1He ' ' "::''6-:- t - '77- i i ' - " 0 'e "4 : 4-- eeee!!-- e- ' ''' ' 41-- '" - :2e i eet "'' i: 4- ' fl '" 1 e I man Mrs - It - "e! if a ellt - - ever 7 fi ee ''' tl li") the ceremony was over The mortician reseed at his head a srnall tin marker tarrying a eare with his name and dateof-death It stands there- now high above thern city with the other small tin markers: In a few months the card will be gone In a year perhaps the tip marker will have fallen away and there will be nothing to mark the grave of this forgotten city mortuaries Me mortician tried to locate a relative but failed so he applied to Mrs Clara L Jarvis chief deputy of the Salt Lake county health and charity department for a burial fee Before any money can be given to the mortuary every effort Must be made to find a relative and that was Mrs Jarvis' job i 4tt:4: 1-- - e t : c e Marked The police picked up and took it to one of the - the body ' e e - - :! f33iatrget13- ' : it?' 41 ' ?C' re - - 'tee ee - Jt ' t' e''e rC At r:'i ji1 fr ' !i:' ' - e ' turn forwarded a Check to the mortuary for $120 The funeral parlor prepared the body placed it in a plain wooden coffin and vault and teak it to the cemetery for opening the grave in potter's eele "guest" - -- - f eeeeeee ' ''1 te 4e e ' S'1 1 ' 4 4 1 - 24 t ' ' 'r '': rfhere are fewer paupers Nowadays eVerYbOthr 0 keelliS to have money but some still die poor weed-grow- - - ilk- '' '''4 - 4" - eeee g7 vard stands a fragile tin rnark- er bearing the name and date at death of an old man This one is quite new There are othn ers in the field which have lost their rieat white cards and some of them are bent and broken For a while at least this one grave has a name The story begms a few weeks ago The landlord of a cheap hotell on State street called the police station to report the death of a - 1 "'' ''''''''r q1 1- tt' 444rt: flogera and a grave marker—life and death as the photographer found them In Salt Lake Citra potter field A visethered good- High i3 ' 7 rimr - i- 1! - 0 - ' 4 '4 t - t 1: -:' ' y4---- Ä77:4t1'C''''''''' '-- : 1 33 '1 e - 'LT 1 'eeete k-S- ' - ‘ 1 40A: e ''i: t ' 4: eee'eve '''' it - - 1- r e 1"'1::1 -- 4 i i! ' s 44 L :' '''' ' '' 4' - '' 'i' ee'e1 '' i T 4:1 111 ' : 4 a - :) e)-ce'Y'v t ' t?-- e e e lee -e p ' tt- ' ' ë rf:'" '1! F ti14" e - '1 e e ee LA- - — t 'IA' i - tatk j : — '''t' t:"'''f"' I 1 ' e'e' 4"erel -e te-'''''- 4 - it' 33''' 444:tiC '' ''' ee' eel' - E 1- ":10: q I- - - i ' i' ' - A t t- see- ' ' ' '''''' - ' :' te '' ' eel e 1 1 ' :1'' ree--- e 4 1'::-4:'''-- ' 11 ' 0 :''4) l: i l1 :' eePe'e-e- eet 't i ' F '41 !‘ - t tp - t e t e el " ''''f g 1 I !ittz e- - e I e- t "1 ' ':'" 1 eeeeee-- eee - 1 4 I : :2 te ! - '- - ' "''' e f rmtrm - - '''-- - l' J: tl stf a )!:-i4- i -- i " earti rii'llitattli:filleIsiocÀ l i I1 ' )) e' - '' - keietel t-t -- - ' - --- 7 ii - ti''' - oo - ! 1144vP e --- 1- i I Artap A "‘ 1 - ' iese- - ta 1 t A i a L- - -0- -1 Y A Vs ai k : iC "1 Ise - i t - '-- iii 4ea - 1) ''ss-"A4- '' ''‘eliress 0K's4 i -- i'L tA I e 44 el4i - k A 4s i 4 f'7rc A &04 '" f'i 7' 'vtz!:71 iiL40 'V'e -- - p- ttsL'oe r A 1 7 I sr i ”) 4 1 ?te:Viiieose73 imL4 -1 y Not all the pauper graves hold the aged Thee grave are the 'baby aloglea" located above the cemetery off Wasatch boulcvard ADVTIMSEMENT ' rl r - fI ens Nan t 9 MIC1011 '''SkNI ' i k : ' Istla 1 ! alvE: 1 (1 t IS ATELEVISION FAVORITE ' - - - - SHE SINGS AND ACTS ON SCORES OF GUEST APPEAZANCES EVERY YEAR—ON THE BIG- TIME TELECASTS OF THE COUNTRY -- - —--- - 4 ) : - zsp--- - --7- I :-- S' 0 - - - WiT)4 - f- d t:: -- " - ' ' I 1 ' I I li)' ' : 7 4r'it - ' 0 r fp (6j) 141 - THE MILDEST t - BEST-TASTI- i t 0 1tNt'N - A- t'' i 1k :T'"''- - r '1- - t‘‘ I In a coast-to-coatest of' hundreds o1 men grid women who smoked Camels-avi- d only Camels -- for30 days noted throat- - speciarats ma kinj t'Ve2 kJ) exa m irlatons reported st I 4: - i - i !aELS ' I I a ' THEY'RE My BRAND FOR KEEPS! - 1 t Ili NG CIGARETTE! k A 'P p - ' - 16111rt- '5 1 3: i TtWATCAMELSI Nm--: MY s 0- - '' ' e ' ret- - CIGARETTE THAT AGREES A ' ED ON BROAMAY I USE MY- SeDICE SO MUCH!' SAYS KYLE:II SMOKE TH E k J - f l'f-- VIRDEE c0ITOECAYButicTEKYyELE SININSAR 1 ' -- ' - 'W BY MY 1'1'4 TEST—CAMELS ARE t AocovS ' - ir 'MISS IHREs'Sar ip all k 7 g '411j3t-- etTCN ekB Woe k "C: 1" ir --- i WVACICUS-kYLEAScrr'2-L-14- '''A 1 telAs''''1 - di ' HOT ONE SINGLE CASE OF THROAT f-- kl : P i''''' I : I Ic' t 1 k t CAMe I m t4 - t i ' iI i 12 I p ) ( t I : ii - 00 0 ‘ I ''t t' r r- - f"- i i 1° " o ml' 14 ' F- - 2ele:- - 1- 1 - - - - -- - -- - a- 14 - -- J Pho omen '''''4171014-Nw13- -- 1 eolmo 4muleov dommokangdob 166 14 iArea f ' I ‘"": k TCHT CN A 3 - etc 41gtot ' (iktThrcat-T- rased kr a batdd ) c(it m k I I I t fk |