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Show 'THE UTAH BUDGET All records for drought in the fall season In Salt Lake have been broken this fall. 5 Entailing a loss of nearly $10,000, 11 fire thought to have developed from a defective line destroyed the residence of William G. lladdix, at Salt Lake. Max F. Birch, 3-year-old son of Claude Birch of Frovo Bench, died from the effects of a fall in which he injured his head about a week pre-, pre-, vlous. ? Mrs. Martha Davis Perkins, one of the pioneer women who made the jour- ney across the plains by ox team in 'St 1S62, died at her home in Salt Lake is last week. Carl Mangus Bergstrom, aged S:, i. died at his home in Salt Lake last week. For a number of years he had J ieen engaged in missionary work for the Mormon church. - , rtan has the greatest wonder park ; In the United States, according to John G. Critchlow of Salt Lake, wJio I Teeently returned from a three weeks' trip into southern Utah. 1 A complaint charging murder in the i: second degree has been issued against : Frank Murphy, ex-pugilist, who is accused ac-cused of killing James M. Poland, a ; bartender, at Salt Lake, ; Within thirty days the chapel being j built, at Cgden by the Mormon church for the use of the deaf and the blind ; will be completed and will be dedieat-: dedieat-: ed about Christmas Ume. Retrial of the case of the state against Giovanni Anselmo, once convicted con-victed of the murder of Patrolman Thomas Griffiths at Salt Lake, will not ,; occur until the first of the year. ; In a fit of despondency following a quarrel with his wife, francis Keating; aged 26, until recently employed in the Southern Pacific shops, took poison poi-son at Ogden, and died forty minutes later. The season's report of fires in the Wasatch national forest, when compiled, com-piled, will show this to have been the ; hardest year for lighting fire the officers of-ficers of the forest have yet experi- enced. Articles of incorporation for the United States Beet Seed company, or-; or-; ganized in Salt Lake for the purpose of furnishing seed in times of need to American sugar operators, are being prepared. Laying of concrete on the stata highway in Davis county was completed com-pleted last week, and the seventy convicts con-victs engaged in the work are now-busy now-busy putting dirt shoulders along the highway beside the concrete. T. Osakis, a Japanese cook who is alleged to have killed T. Uweda, a fellow fel-low countryman, and seriously wounded wound-ed another during a nuarrel at Garfield October 20, has been 'bound over to the district court without bail. The farmers of Curlew valley are making another effort, it is said, to interest in-terest the officials of the Southern Pacific company in building a railroad through the Curlew valley by way of Blue Creek and Pocatello valleys. Large cloth banners calling attention atten-tion to the wisdom of purchasing Utah products will be suspended at the entrances en-trances of the six 'bridges over streams on roads entering Ogden by members of the Manufacturers' Association o Utah. The Utah Motor Car company, en organization capitalized at $250,000, and designed to assist people who" want to purchase automobiles, but are unable to pay cash for them, has filed articles of incorporation at Salt Lake. x The body of H. S. Hardy, aged 33, a harber who had disappeared from Arthur, was found in a cave east of Garfield. A bullet wound in his breast and a revolver by his side would indicate indi-cate suicide. Hardy had been despondent de-spondent for some time. Unless a special meeting of the board of pardons is called by the governor gov-ernor to consider the case of Joseph Hillstrom, sentenced to be shot November No-vember 19 for the murder of J. G. Morrison and his son, J. Arling Morrison, Mor-rison, the rules of that board are such that his case will not come before it. In order to bring the celebration of the advent of the Orem lines into Spanish Fork on the same date as the trade extension excursion of the Manufacturers' Man-ufacturers' association of Utah to the southern part of the state, arrangements arrange-ments have been made to postpone the Orem program from November 12 to November 17. Forage poisoning has caused the death of nine horses belonging to a farmer near St. John. Forage poisoning poison-ing is a disease affecting horses only, the symptoms of which are similar to those of spinal meningitis. Its origin Is not known, hut the poison occurs in pastures and shows in the hay cut (rom any poisoned pasture. Among the women who will handle the funds of their respective towns in Utah the next two years are Mary A. Abel of American Fork, Mary Farns-worth Farns-worth of Manti, B. Dahl of Ephraim, Elizabeth A. Crook of Payson, Han neh Barnett of Mount Pleasant, V'ilate Rasmussen, Fillmore, Jennie A. Isaacson, Isaac-son, Richfield, and Mrs. M. Boone at Mammoth. |