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Show Fire Warning Sent Out to Sky Riders Pra. Fouts New Blethod Dentiit. idr, Washington, phone SIS. Mrs. "Kid Smith, charged with possession of liquor, forfeited her rath bail of $100 in the city court Wednesday. . Alleged violators of the vehicle or dinance paid the city court Wednesday morning the following amounts: 24 CS L. M. Cox, $2; N. 11. Donovan, $3; L. Reynolds, I). C. Kimose, and Clint 1 W i f ' J Ilerrick, 3 each. Charged with disturbing the peace, Antonio Jiminex qnd Petra Lopes were dismissed from the city court Monday. Jimincz was discharged because of insufficiency of the evidence, and Lopez was tried and adjudged not guilty by the court. Fred Williams, who was charged with disturbing the peace at the Lincoln hotel at Lincoln avenue and Twenty-fourt- h street Saturday ning and waf shot and slightly wounded by the proprietor, pleaded guilty when arraigned in the city court Wednesday and was fined $75. F. M. Pierce, 141 Second street, reported to the police Sunday that a thief had entered his home through a door that had been left open and had stolen a watch, some small change, a knife, several keys, and a pair of overalls. Lewis Likes, 354 Dan street, reported to the police Sunday that a thief had entered his home Saturday and stolen a pair of overalls and $1.50 in cash; also a pair of spectacles. Chief of Police A. E. Wilfong recommended to tho city commission Monday that three prisoners be pardoned from the city jail: the request was granted and the following were released: Myrtle Bell, drunkenness; George Romcdoz, carrying concealed weapon; Charles Wood, drunkenness. Funeral Sprays, Baskets and Designs, any price, from $1 up. Why pay 740 28th street. more? Weber-Floraladv. Phone 410. An action for divorco has been filed by Catherine T. Bachelor against George O. Batchelor on the grounds of desertion and failure to support. The couple were married April. 15, 1904, and have seven children, four of Mrs. Bachelor whom are minors. states that her husband deserted her in September, 1928, and says that she understands he is making his home in Idaho Falls. Idaho. She asks for the custody of the children, $75 for tho attorney and other relief. Ivy May Vandcr Schuit's suit against J. S. Daniels and W. K. Fife, to recover on a bond of $600 given when her former husband, James R. Watson, appealed to the supreme court from an alimony decision rendered by the late Judge James N. Kimball, was taken under advisement Wednesday by Judge E. E. Pratt. The sureties take the ground that as the supreme court reversed the judgment of Judge Kimball that they were not liable. An action for divorce has been filed in the Second district court by Petrs Jimenez against Antonio Jimenez on the grounds of cruelty. The couple were married March 15, 1929, accord ing to the complaint, and Mrs. Jimenez says that on June 1, 1929, her husband attacked her with his fists, beating her on the arms and face. She alleges that he again attacked her on March 15, 1930, striking her with his fists. She asks for general relief. D. R. Roberts, census enumerator for the northern district of Utah, including Weber, Box Elder, Cache, Rich and Morgan counties, reports satisfac troy progress in the enumeration. A count of 30,000 or more was made in the first three days of the census ing in his district. lie states that the work will probably be completed during the month of April. A. M. Lamb, building inspector, fll ed a report with the city commission Wednesday setting out that he did not believe that the damage done to tho home of W. A. Craven by the backing up of a sewer some weeks ago into the basement of his home would ex ceed $30.00. The same report was made by the city engineer, John C. Brown. J. C. Littlefield was directed to notify Mr. Craven of the report Mr. Craven places the damages at a much higher figure. Maurice Howe, Ogdei newspaper correspondent, who has been on a trip around the world, arrived in Ogden Monday. Mr. Howe has been away six months, and visited in Canada, Asia, Africa, Egypt and a number of other countries. Mayor Ora Bundy states that he is much pleased with tho cooperation of the citizens in Ogdens cleanup campaign week which started April 6, and will continue until Saturday evening. The city trucks hauled away the rubbish placed at the curbs during the past week. Aid in cleaning rubbish from vacant lots is asked by the city . ti 4. i fr Vi - i . v M ;4 " ; V;-- ' i" Ji r; j r i V H . iMt 1 I . H , u i ? s? :vi t tk i4 M . ' ; ' . ' :t ? ; commission.1 : t, ' 1 . Judge Eugene E. Pratt, of the probate division of the Second district court, has appointed Fred Summerill, Jr., as guardian of Fred Summerill, Sr., president and manager of the Sumnierhill Foundry and Stove Repair Works, at 2139 Jefferson avenue. Mr. Summerill, Sr., is in ill health. The guardian, who is secretary and treasurer of the business, is required to file a bond in the sum of $56,000. The business was founded in this city several years ago by the elder Mr. Summerill. Harold Ipson, 16, son of Aasel Ip-so-n, 936 4.1 Twenty-sevent- h street, who was injured in an automobile accident Saturday evening at Thirteenth street anA Washington avenue, was removed .to his home Sunday from the Dee hospital and Is improving steadily. Ipson suffered severe cuts and bruises when the automobile in which he was riding crashed into a pole. Carl J. Dee has commenred damago proceedings in the district court for $15,000 against Fred and Ralph Child, for careless and reckless driving on their part when they ran over Mrs. Anna J. Dee and fatally injured her on the Riverdale road November 6, 1929. Mrs. Dee died about a month after the accident There are two minor children and heirs of Mrs. Dee. At least three thousand persons Colonel Clarence M. Young, assistant secretary of aeronautics, of the department of commerce, has advised the secretary of agriculture that he has sent a letter to all pilots of whom the department has record some 9000 in number calling attention to a provision in the air commerce regulations against the dropping or releasing of any objects from air crafts, which would endanger life or damage propthings erty. This would include such Colonel as lighted cigars or cigarettes. the Young has advised the pilots that viofor are which provided penalties lations, will be rigidly enforced. Thea department of commerce is sending similar communication to the various air transport organizations whether they are transporting passengers, . mail, or merchandise. called to was of Attention pilots this regulation as the result of a letter written by Acting Secretary of Agriculture R. W. Dunlap, which called attention to the hazard to which forests, grain fields, grass lands, and property are exposed through lighted cigarettes dropped from airplanes. Tests made by the aerial forest patrol in Idaho during 1929 showed thgt lighted cigars or cigarettes dropped from planes at high altitudes continued to burn after reaching the ground. In fact, it has been pretty well established that a fire which occurred near the Coeur d Alene forest in Idaho last summer, was started by a passenger carrying plane. The cooperation of the department of commerce in enforcing this regulation should prevent many forest and grass fires. With the increased use of airplanes, the fire danger would become greater annually if some restrictions of this kind were not Canncrs Discuss the Will Benefit Utah Handling of 1930 Crop Colton-Oddi- Bill e perintendent, class 2, $2,000 to $2,500 a year; laundry superintendent, class 3, or laundry foreman, class 1, $1,680 to $1,980 a year; laundry foreman, class 2, $1,500 to 100 a year,' bureau throughout the United . States. Full information may be obtained from A. R. Ward, secretary of the United States civil service board of in this examiners at the post office ' city. ret-era- Utah and the other public land states will greatly benefit by the pasbill appropsage of the Colton-Oddfor constructhe $12,500,000 riating tion of highways through forest reserves. The roads will not only open up the forest reserves to the public, but in most instances the roads will connect with units of the state highway system already built or under construction. The funds appropriated by the -Oddie bill will be available in three annual installments; and, while the amount each state will receive has not been given out, it is understood that the amount to be expended in Utah will be $185,000 for each of the three years. In addition to the funds appropriated by the Colton-Oddbill, which will be used exclusively on the forest reserve department of the public domain, the federal aid fund, which has to be matched by the counties, and under which all the federal aid projects of the past have been carried through, is being worked out and will be expended as In the past. The state road commission is seeking bids on contracts totaling $G50,-00the work to begin as soon as the contracts are let. In addition, it has projects to be advertised this month or next which will total about $470,000; while only a multiplicity of bridges to be designed may delay another $100,000 contract for a few days longer. , Advertisements for bids for two strips, totaling 4.4 miles in Washington county, and for two bid bridges on one of these projects; for the paving of the roadways on the state cap-itgrounds, equivalent to about L75 miles of straight rural highway; for furnishing gravel to and spreading it on 19.5 miles of road in Beaver and Iron counties; for construction of 8 miles between Manti and Nine-Mireservoir; for applying oil mulch on 65 miles of highway in the south central and southwestern part of the state, and for supplying an amount of road estimated to cost around $140,000, are now running it was reported. Projects for which plans and specifications are ready include construction of five miles from Wasatch to the Wyoming state line; 13 miles near Snowville, completing a gravel highway to the Idaho line; 14 miles of road and 21 bridges between Woodside and Green River; 7.8 miles in Salt Creek canyon, Juab county, and about 8.5 miles beyond Cisco, near the Colorado line, Grand county. The latter project also has several bridges and will, on that account, be rather later than the others, it was ie Colton- ie Plans for handling the 1930 crop of fruits and vegetables were discussed by members of the Utah Canners association at their monthly meeting, held Monday at the Newhouse hotel in Salt Lake. It was reported that contracting for tomatoes, peas and beans is practically completed and arrangements will be made later for the purchase of canning crops from the growers. With J. S. Earley, secretary of the Utah Shippers' Tratfic association in attendance at the noon luncheon, the question of obtaining more equitable freight rates for Utah canners was discussed. Although the canners now reach a fairly wide territory, it was felt that the market could be greatly enlarged if rate adjustments were obtained. Conditions in Dairy Industry to be Taken By Bureau of Census ns . Winner Will Receive Trip to Chicago LOGAN, April 3. trip to A free outstanding boy and theTut girl in club work during thedS1 and the new prize for the the dress revue. club Chicago to attend the annual congress will be awarded from Utah to the girl who wins in the style dress revue contest at the state fair this year, D. P. Murray, state club leader dub announced Thursday. The Miss who wins at the Chicago contest will be given a trip to Paris in 1931 as a guest of the Chicago Mail Order company, who is sponsoring the dress revue prize for the state. There will also be 12 wrist watches given at the Chicago contest. Each county in the state is entitled to enter two dothing club girls in the Utah style revue. Each entrant must be a bona fide clothing dub member during 1930; she must have made the clothing which she exhibits and the costumes must have been selected dress revue from a county, wide contest. Entrants will be permitted to enter one of. the four classes: cotton school dress, tailored wool dress, silk dress or an' afternoon or informal party dress. Trip-priznow offered for outdub members in Utah standing include: trip to Pacific International livestock show, Portland, Ore., for the winning boys team and the winning girls', team at the club demonstrations at the state fair; also, for the winner of the fruit canning contest; trip to Chicago to the club congress for the Four People Are Affected t By Carelessness on the part of . ' man is given as the cause of . tragedy yesterday, when two J? were overcome by escaping 1 l5 and two were affected. The accident occurred at of Frank E. Higginbotham, 4-- H 4-- H maid, was also overcome, v, Mrs. Higginbotham were also iLl by the fumes. Mr. Higginbotham summoned r C. H. Jensen, and Mrs. telephoned her sister, Mrs R. gJ? ter. Dr. F. K. Bartlett was Uteri! moned, and both physicians rnuU prompt first-ai- d treatment. A tinsmith had been working larging a vent on a waterhesteT!! when the 'Higginbothams left & Lake Wednesday he left the without reconnecting the vent tsa flue, according to a gas co.npanV nJ The dairy industry has been giveq a prominent place in the farm census resentative. which Is to be taken by the bureau of aid2 and the census beginning April ing May 1 this year. The various, questions to be asked dairymen are DRUG expected to yield basic and current data which will enable federal and state STORE agricultural economics to help dairymen formulate a program of future Now Located at development for the industry. This of as census is of the regarded phase 2207 Washington special importance by specialists of the U. S. department of agriculture, Avenue in view of current conditions in the dairy industry. The dairy section of the census will During the Remodeling get information on the number of milk of the Old Store. cows on farms and the quantity of milk produced in 1929. It will get the number of cows milked which are of beef or breeding; the quantity and value of milk sold; cream sold; butterfat sold; butter sold, and the number of cows being milked at the time the census is taken, which will be in April, together with the daily production of milk at that time. Among the dairy questions to be asked, will be questions as to the number of yearling heifers; the number of heifers born in 1928 which are being Service . ...... kept mainly for milk cows; the numSavings Department, 4 ber of heifers born in 1928 being kept Interest. mainly for beef cows or beef producChecking Accounts. cows number of and born heifers tion; Foreign Exchange. . before 1928 being kept mainly for Trust Department. milk production; cows and heifers Trunk Storage. born before 1928 being kept mainly for beef production; total number of cows and heifers milked during all or any part of 1929; number of cows and heifers milked, the number which is stated. mainly of beef or of Late dispatches from Washington breeding; the gallons of milk produced says: in 1929, and pounds of butter churned ' "The Colton-Oddlegislation pro- in 1929. i. viding for an increase from $7,500,000 to $12,500,000 per year for the three years beginning July 1, 1930, passed both houses of Congress Monday and The foundation and main- its approval by the president is confidently expected. This bill giving stay of our steady growth The United States civil service coman additional $5,000,000 per year for is service to the communbuilding forest highways and main mission announces the following open roads that approach forest reserva- competitive examinations: ity. Senior medical technician (bacteris tions requires that the preference shall be given to those roads located on the ology or roentgenology), $2,000 a The foundation of your federal aid system which are not year; medical technician (bacteriology own development lies in otherwise financed for construction." or roentgenology), $1,620 a year, ' building the surplus in Chairman Henry H. Blood of the United States veterans bureau, for state road commission was promptly duty in the field. Assistant geophysical technologist, your account. advised of passage of the bill Monday by Congressman Don B. Colton, co- $2,600 to $3,100 a year,, bureau of author of the measure; W. C. Mark- mines, department of commerce, for ham, secretary of the National As- duty in Washington, D. C., or in the sociation of Highway. Officials and field. Associate bacteriologist, $3,200 to Preston G. Peterson of the Utah road commission who is now in Washing- $3,700 a year; assistant bacteriologist. $2,600 to $3,100 a year, bureau of ton, D. C. This is the second piece of legisla- chemistry and soils, department of agtion increasing federal road appropri- riculture, for duty in Washington, D. ations and M r. Blood gave consider- C., or in the Held. The optional subable credit for the success of this jects are (1) general, (2) food prod legislation to several western congres- ucts, (3) soils, (4) dairy. UTAH. sional delegations who had been ac'Automatic addressograph operator, $1,440 a year; F- -l and F-- 2 adtively working for its enactment He gave credit particularly to Con- dressograph operator, $1,260 a year; gressman Colton, Senator Oddie of graphotype operator, $1,260 a year, Nevada, Senator Phipps of Colorado, departmental service, Washington, D. Thomas M. McDonald, director of the G federal road bureau, and Mr. MarkLaundry superintendent, class 1, ham, secretary of the national organ- $2,300 to $2,800 a year; laundry su ization of highway officials. These men are entitled to the congratulations of tho country at large and particularly the west for the expansion of highway building this legislation will make possible, Mr. Blopd said. In Utah the forest road appropriations will make about $185,000 available for each of the next three years in addition to the $170,000 that has S usually been available annually for the past several years. These funds will be available for speding up the road building on those roads which approach national forests or traverse them and are located on the main trunk highways. Projects are already being arranged and Mr. Blood expects that the forest service, the bureau of public roads engineers and the Utah road commission will meet soon to HUPMOBILE 1926 SEDAN, 5 good tires, nice finally agree on the projects. 0, f 4-- H DRIVERS scmi-tailor- ed . . es 4-- H ol dual-purpo- se le from Weber, North Weber, Ogden and Mt. Ogden stakes attended the pageant, "The Message of the Ages," in the tabernacle in Salt Lake Wednesday evening. The pageant is an important feature of the centennial celebration of the L. D. S. church. Earl Browning, of 362 Twenty-fourt- h street, who suffered critical in last Thursday night in a fight, juries was reported as improving Thursday in the. Dee hospital He was semiconscious for the greater part of five days. The injuries were sufered at a party at the home of Mrs. Fannie Faulkner Wilbur, according to police report. Dr. Francis R. Conroy, who has charge of the case, reports improvement in Bownings condition. A number of Ogden business men returned from a weeks trip to southern Utah and California points Tuesday. Included in the party were J. Francis Fowles, P. C. Richardson, L. L. Hains and Robert Hoggan. They motored to St. George, Utah, and inspected the work on the Escalante Exploration company, which is drilling Oil company, for the and from there they drove to Los Angeles and San Diego. Letters of administration have been applied for in the estate of Caroline S. Silverton in the probate division of the Second district court by Henry S. Silverton. The estate is valued at Mrs. Silverton died in Ogden $2500. Mid-Americ- an March 31. Lawrence Hogg, charged with speeding, entered a plea of guilty in the city court Monday morning. lie was fined $10. Harry Leishman was fined $5 for violating the1 vehicle ordinance Monday in the city court. Judge Eugene E. Pratt made an order Monday in the divorce case of Irv ing Fryer against Kathryn Fryer, transferring the custody of two minor children to the father. The mother was said to be ill and unable to properly care for tho children. L. S. Carr, charged with giving a bad check for-$recently, was dis charged in the city court .Wednesday on tho grounds of insufficiency of evidence. The check was made out to P. II. Johnson. William Wilson, 102 West Thir-tiet- h street, reported to the police that 75 feet of garden hose had been stolen from his home Wednesday. The city commission Wednesday awarded the contract for a roller skating rink at Lorin Farr park to R. C. Gilmore. The city will receive $75 a month for four months beginning May 1 15. Judge George S. Barker gave judgment Monday in the Second district court in the case of the Price Current Grain company against the Great Basin Grain company.. The judgment was given in favor of the plaintiff; the amount was approximately $130. The case had been appealed from the city court, where judgment was also in favor of the plaintiff. A report was made to the police Monday that the Weber county high school at Eleventh street and Washington avenue was entered Sunday, either during the day or night, and $2.15 in money and some candy was stolen. The entrance was effected through a door on the south in the building. A wrist watch, $3 in cash, and a fountain pen were stolen from the home of N. C. Reno, 152 West Second street Sunday, according to a report made to the police department Mon day. Charles II. Phillips, charged with involuntary manslaughter for the killing of Joseph Giles, whom he ran over with a truck. April 3, appeared in the city court Monday morning and his preliminary hearing was set for April IS. A. L. Doris and James Morris, charged with disturbing the peace at the White City, pleaded guilty in the city court Monday and were each fin- ed $5. Eddie Mack, charged with posses sion of liquor, pleaded guilty in the city court Monday morning, and was fined $50. Harold Simmons, charged with the same offense, also pleaded guilty and was fined a similar sum. . - . dual-purpo- se ie Government Needs Bacteriologists , . NATIONAL BANK OF COMMERCE OGDEN. 3-- A DEPENDABLE DODGE TRADE-IN- W e invite you to inspect these cars try them; then compare values with any others you may choose Milk surplus may be lowered by feding every possible pound of milk to the bull and heifer calves more desirable for vealing than for breeding purposes. DR. F. J. DRAKE Veterinary and Surgeon Phone 1150 2132 Van Buren Are. at the corner of Van Buren and Capitol Ogden, Utah upholstery, painted maroon. Mechanically O. K. DODGE 1927 SEDAN, 5 good tires, new up-holstery, new paint, good condition PONTIAC 1928 SEDAN, new tires, bright upholstering, first class mechanical oondition DODGE VICTORY SIX SEDAN, 1929 model, newly painted, good tires, first class mechanical condition $850 Not a Sale Just Everyday Prices! Each of the above cars has been inspected . . . repaired . . tested . K.d by our own service department. Each is fully guaranteed to give complete satisfaction. O. Terms of Course! ROBERT H. HINCKLEY. Inc. 2810 Washington Ave. Phone Open Sundays and Evenings 121 |