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Show THE UTAH BUDGET The rul, Asricultural r;:'.!c;;e sum-iiior sum-iiior school at l.oKan for l!lr, win be-giu be-giu June 7 and close July 10. The- lllack Hawk veterans held their annual reunion in the Wasatch stake tal.einaele at Holier City on Friday. A decrease of oy cenU hmulred , th price of Uour is expected temporarily temporar-ily and perhaps permanently to relieve the bread situation in Salt Lake and Ogden. Directors of the Ogden, Logan & Idaho Railway company have re-elected M. S. Browning as president and retained re-tained P. D. Kline as general manager ol the company. Advices have com.-i to Salt Lake from New York that the Denver & Salt Lake railroad, otherwise known as the Moffat road, ia having some financial trouoles. Fred M. Sanford, manager of the Price Trading company store, who was severely burned by a gasoline explosion at Price, died March 4, from the effects of his burns. Death claimed a pioneer resident and prominent stockman of Weber county last week when L. B. Hammond. Ham-mond. tiG years of age, a former county coun-ty commissioner, died at his home in Roy. Saturday, March 27, has been fixed as the opening day for Salt Lake's newest show place, the Newhouse hotel. ho-tel. The hotel will have 400 rooms, each with a bath and each an outside room. After sixteen years of continuous service in the Mt. Pleasant postoffice, during twent of which lie was postmaster, post-master, Thomas Bralw has been relieved re-lieved by L. p. Nelson, the new postmaster. post-master. I.-mael Andason. aged 13, died at Salt Lake after being run down by a sircet car while playing "tag" in the street. His left foot v as ground to a pu'.p, his right leg broken, and lie suffered suf-fered concussion of the brain. The appoiiiLiiieiit of Gould 11. Rlake-ly Rlake-ly of Salt Lake and Heber C. Jex of Provo as register and receiver, respec. tively, of the United Slates land office at Salt Lake were sent to the senate March 3 by President Wilson. A carload of elk is ready for shipment ship-ment to Utah from Gardner, Mont. The shipment will mean an addition of twenty-fhe head to Utah's supply of elk. Part of them will be liberated near Bingham and the others near Nephi. Anthems composed by her husband during the early history of the Mormon Mor-mon church were sung at the funeral services of Mrs. Sarah Walters Clay-con, Clay-con, widow of William Clayton, secre-vary secre-vary to Joseph Smith, which took place March 3 in Salt Lake City. It is asserted that Salt Lake's water mains are so clogged with deposits on the inside of the pipes that the carrying carry-ing capacity has in many cases been reduced to less than half of what it originally was, and in one important instance to as low as 36 per cent. The biggest fire in Fillmore's history his-tory on March 3 destroyed $15,000 to ?39.000 worth of stock and fixtures of the G. R. Huntsman store and only the brick walls cf the two-story building stood when the fire had been extinguished extin-guished with the aid oi 200 townspeople. townspeo-ple. With a view to bettering sanitary conditions in the centers of the business busi-ness blocks, the city sanitary inspec-tcr inspec-tcr will recommend to the city commission com-mission that a municipal feed yard be constructed in the central part of the city for use by farmers who drive to Ogden. Plazel Tout, the Ogden girl who has won fame as a beauty and a singer and who is known to the stage as Plazel Dawn, was awarded two prizes and a gold medal at. the Panama-Pacific International exposition in San Francisco as the most beautiful woman wo-man in America. After posing, it is said, as saleswoman sales-woman for a local automobile agency, Miss Villa M. Wiseman, 25 years of age. was arrested in Salt Lake by a sheriff of Ogden, on a charge of having hav-ing forged the name of V. B. May, chief of the Maylon Detective service, to a check for $750. Thomas Hicken, a patriarch in the Mormon church, died at Heber City, March 3, in his eighty-eighth year. Death resulted from pneumonia, con-traded con-traded several weeks ago. Mr. Ilick-tn Ilick-tn was one of the first settlers in the Provo valley, having come from Lan-castershiie, Lan-castershiie, England. The first revenue received by the city of Provo on the basis of earnings from the holders of a franchise has been paid by the Utah Valley Gas and ('cue company. It is a check for 60.94, being 1 per cent of the gross earnings of the company for the first year of its operat ion. The commissioners of Carbon county coun-ty have instructed the county attorney and clerk to call a special election on April 12 to vote on issuing $31,000 5 per cent bonds to build, repair and maintain roads in every precinct of the county. This is in lieu of a proposed pro-posed issue of $fiO,000 at first considered. |