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Show THE UTAH BUDGET More lliiir. 3.000,0(10 Iroul. will h pUmteil in Uio streams of Utah from the stale luitclicries next month. Mrs. Mary M, (larn, a resident of I'tali for sixty years, died, at Center ille last week at the age of 95 year. There seems to lie no indication ot nliatcmenl of immigrants into the dry farming- sections of the state. Nicholas Hangerler is in a serious condition as a result, of having been struck hy a (rain at ('enterville. when the train crashed into his automobile. Shooting of pine liens, willow grouse and sage heus will lie opened to sportsmen of all counties of Utah Sep '.ember 1 and will continue for fifteen days. J. C. Darke is in a Salt Lake hos pital suffering from a fracture of the left hip and concussion of the brain, the result of the capsizing of an automobile. auto-mobile. Harry K. Thaw, who recently, gained his freedom from the New York asylum, was a Salt Lake visitor visi-tor last week on a transcontinental automobile tour. The advent of settlers into San Juan, Beaver and Millard counties and the Uintah basin, beginning with early summer, has continued without any noticeable decrease. Mrs. Bergite Knudsen. widow of Hans Knudsen, regarded as the oldest woman in Provo, died last week at the age of 9S years and S months. Mrs. Knudsen came to Utah iu 1S(4. Mrs. Shamira Young Rossiter, widow of William A. Rossiter and daughter of the lale President Brig ham Young and Lucy Decker Y'oung. died at her home in Salt Lake last week. Christian Aalund, 76 years of age, a veteran of the Danish-Prussian war of 1S64. who was decorated by the king of Denmark for bravery in that conflict, died August 25 at his home in Salt Lake. John Bissegger, a Providence youth, has been sentenced to serve three months in the county Jail for striking his mother. The testimony was that he hit his mother so hard that he broke her jaw. When his automobile ran into a wagon near Salt Lake, Roy J. Dor-ton, Dor-ton, a traveling salesman, was seriously se-riously injured, the wagon was upset and its occupants thrown out, but all escaped injury. In a report to the division of militia mili-tia affairs. Captain W. B. Burtt, United States army, senior instructor of the National Guard of Utah, pays tribute to the efficiency of the National Na-tional Guard of Utah. Utah contains almost 85,000 square miles, its population is approximately 415,000 and its school population be tween 6 aud 18 years is 121,000. lis assessed valuation is about two hundred hun-dred and twenty-one millions. After three weeks in California, two of which were spent in a camp of instruction in-struction near Gigling, the First battery bat-tery field artillery, National Guard of Utah, under command of Captain W. C. Webb, returned to Salt Lake last week. Gilbert Williams, aged 35 years, for many years employed as bookkeeper in tlie "office of the Martin Coal com pany, at Salt La-ke, in which fire de veloped late at night, is being held at police headquarters pending an investigation. in-vestigation. Under the new tax law effective this year, taxpayers who permit their taxes to become delinquent will have to pay as a penalty, 3 per cent of the amount of their taxes. This penalty becomes due immediately after the taxes become delinquent. The survey of farms in Salt Lake county begun about three weeks ago by H M Dixon of the federal farm management bureau, has been completed com-pleted and the surveyor has obtained ISO records of farm management and ' farm conditions in this county. From the Agricultural college experimental ex-perimental farm at Cedar City, Iron countv, comes the information tnav the pumping plant in connection with the experimental well driven by the state land board on the farm is completed and working admirably. The judgment in the Eccles-Geddes case in which Albert Geddes Eccles v.-as declared to be an heir to the estate of the late David Eccles, ha. been signed by Judge J. A. Howell or the Second judicial district and as placed on record in the court on the 25th. -V W Harcombe. an attorney, wanted at Cgden in connection with the alleged embezzlement of a sum of money said to total more than $400 from the accounts of the C. J. Her r ck & Co., an Ogden firm dealing in fTni.ure, has been arrested at Green r. l'io Fifty Sevier county farmers have been making a tour of inspection of farms and dairies of the centra and northern part of the state i, w.th the idea of securing information of benefit in their own life work Ti e trip over 1,000 miles was made In automobiles- |