Show — - ?:--: Vv:: t -- :V -- " —: V ' ' THE WOULD SHEAR ' Pro- Legislators - Naming Committees i lature according to counties submitted by the Democratic caucus committees of the House arei Sergeant at Arms to Cachetoycounty' hT Cache J 'Nellson decided upon '' county delegation No Chief clerk to Weber county"' one named Four committee clerks to Salt Lake county " ' ' Messenger and chaplain to Utah county Two committee clerks to Sanpete county 'or In lien thereof one clerk and a watchman Messenger to lVuateh eonnty v Doorkeeper to Grand eounty WaDoorkeeper or - clerkship to satch county Minute cleric to Suit Lake eonnty v Docket clerk undecided V i to the governor Messenger but Box Elder county wants it Other employees to be allotted at 030 o’clock this morning ' : ! Lake County Is Bested' by Outsiders — 1 were Sprung in the SURPRISES committee on allotment on rules of the and Democratic caucus of the House of In the first Representatives last night Salt lake the of the coup place after an caucus in having the in delegation the allotment committee appointed part of the pie county got but a small on second place the committee In thewill radical report this morning rules changes from rules which have governed other Legislatures If the report Is adopted the speaker will be shorn of his power in appointing committees and before bill are printed they will have to be submitted to a legislative committee a new creation of the Demofor its approval cratic party the most radical departure Probably of a rule to prewas recommendation vent the moving of the weapon previoustoquescurb tion as a parliamentary carries question debate If the previous can be hadupon lio further discussion the Housey a motion or subject before "With this eliminated' from prac- debate will be house practice lower the unlimited in tlcally be the same as that and the rule willSenate the in obtaining In taking up the dl8jrI£ut?11°f £1 the fleers and employees to name the committee first undertook this to be caucus nominees but found decided to It was then impractical counties by Lake distribute tothe pie Salt was govern keojeraphy second and on the list and Webertwenty-eiarfirst ao on down the list' of In proportion to their popucounties The Salt Lake representative lation almost every posihad an applicant forcommittee had made tion as the county Mrs Although many indorsements Lake Salt the representing Hayward caused the committee to be contingent outside counties were in a macreated took most of the plums and jority Fight for Chaplain A feature of the committee allotfor man chaplain ments was the fight blind had IV Tltnson a Georgerecommended Lake Salt the by been and a great deal or county committee by was done in his behalf buttonholing however Lakers theUtah county Salt make will and waa alloted position does if the ofcaucus coma selection today action not overturn the also lost the the chief mittee SaltAnLake unknown whole name clerkship conwas not given by the Salt Lske sergeant-at-arm- s for a was candidate tingent and this went to Cache county selected The Cache county delegation N J Nellson of Hyrum for the place had gone over The rules committee and was the new rules the matter toofmeet with a similar cominstructed and make a remittee from the Senate of the the Heretofore speaker port the power House has always been given hut this year to appoint committees decided that since the Inrules committee comare Democrats all theonHouse apbe should committees mittee to name House committees and pointed be a member that the speaker shouldthat committees The position was takenfrom floor of the appointed practically the House are more prone to report out new blThe legislative committee not bills one It will decide whether orare to be which have been introduced to and bills will be referred printed to before being sent or this committee for favorable the other committees 'i ’ unfavorable action previouw OU a The barring of lathelooked House uoony tlon in the leaders with number of the Democratic one weapon to predisfavor With the or talking bills to vent filibustering is the House eliminated it death Inout conHouse may the that pointed with-osume all of Its time in discussion call ever reaching the point of roll will be threshed out at These mattersthis morning the meeting ’ - ‘ ht ’ ' Is-a- J I Heirs to Reiser Estate and Stst Come to An Understanding ‘‘ Heirs to the estate of the l&te Henry Reiser and state officials have agreed upon a compromise settlement of the of claim of the state for the payment an Inheritance tax The heirs to the estate agree to pay the tax of $299250 into three- if the payments are divided state The Installments agreed year to the plan and the first payment of treasurer $99750 was made to the state The courts approved the compromise agreement ' Committees to be appointed committee on committees to be apLegislative committee whether decide shall which pointed hills shall he printed or not after being introduced Elimination of the previous question and placing no cheek on debate In the House Aetlon of both committees must be ratified by the caucus w and secondary- grades the elementary advisable and enlargeas are deemedstate board of education ment of the to seven members are the major recommendations in the report of the state filed code commission educationalGov Simon with Bamberger yesterdayEv G Gowans “ state - superby Dr' and intendent of public instruction All prochairman of the commissionvisions recommended ' for revising the incorporated state school laws will be or in course in bills already prepared enactment by tne of preparation for and are briefly summarLegislature ized in the commission’s report seven It is proposed that six of the of' educamembers of the state board' thegover-nor-twtion shall be appointed by terms oxo each biennium for tobe promembers noteducational six years such v in engaged fessionally "with any educawork nor connected comtional institution - serve without to pensation and be subject specific causes on by the governor for the or secretarywhole filed with charges the state this board to govern instate system of public education and institutions higher cluding to Institutionsiind ana todial educational secondary the generally supervise schools elementary Is The seventh member officer as an executive by the board as o£ the commiMloner to be known the whom education through policies of the board are to betenure of office board to fix his salary removal and to have Power of the board snau When fully organized ' state educational all of heads appoint Institutions and on their °r o1?®”' tion the subordinate assMtant: sdeteachers of the departments etate or Subordinate officers heada of education partment etc we to be ap-or divisions assistants the board on nomination by pointed the commissioner subject to removal on his motion Consolidates Present Boards to each LegisThe board shall submit educational expenses lature a budget ofbiennium for the ensuing outlined are:andTo other per duties general exercise by form duties heretofore of public Instruction superintendent education regents of state board ofUtah trustees of Utah of University trustees of state college Agricultural trustees of and blind deaf schools for schools such and school Industrial state to regu as may be created1 hereafter funds- - to late distribution of school eduschools to enforce laws pertaining provide for cation or child welfare: of teachr vocational education tr&inmg board with statesanitaers and in conjunction for proper of health provide and tion of bulldinga of school children medical Inspection on cost efficiency to give publicity d needs of public facilities methods education to standaize prellnary education and training public supervisors andsuperintendents rewith in conjunction librarians training spective ' hoardsof professional all schools of physicians nurses optometrists public accountants veterinarians and to regulate to report annually conferring degrees other such and perform the governor: may prescribe duties as the Legislature conthe state that Is suggested It amended in cerstitution should tobe make efthe plan tain particular® should fective that adequate revenues be secured and distributed on a saner basts that the state and more equitable to $20 for should provide a fund equal and authorize each child of schooltoage raise additional school units local for school5 purposes amounts necessary fund of per cent aid a differentialschool 'tax asto be set aside of the stats needed) to (or ao much thereofopportunities until equalize educational can be amended and the constitution laws enacted to that end District Organisation No radical changes are proposed re to cities of the first and second lating with the enclass except to conform lnolu ding board the of powers larged standardizincertification of teachersof records and schools auditing g-of £U?i8c£Cnty districts- on which the or commission expended a large part It has Its labors the report says to eliminate been found necessary Inconsistencies and many incongruities the law into and to unify and codify conslrtent form a more compact and law during the The operation of the to PdUit out years has served past twoeffectively wherein changes very Among the cbangei should be made recommended are: Mor2 efficient construction of school buildmeases' more ings better sanitary for of school : V ? ' - - - ILL County Plans to Make Roads Passable for Horse-Drive- n ' Complaint ' against the county’s to scrape the in policy Thirty-thir- d South street snow fromattempting east and west county the principal highway was made yesterday to CL P Stillman commissioner of the roads by a delegaand bridges department the aWest’ Side Commercial tion from as result the road is to club and be treated with a steam roller in an" effort to pack theN enoyr: P Petersen" and Joseph Smith the H J Walker a committee from conCommercial club explained the ditions to Mr Stillman They said that the when the anow is scraped fromwhich into center a deep trench is leftsnow soft They the wind whips the soon becomes imsaid the trench and on account of its depth passable cannot turn out to the aide vehicles of the road Mr Stillman and R E I Collier and acting road comcounty surveyor demissioner visited the scene andwow cided on the attempt to pack the roller down Mr Collier said the steam will be tried the “It will be Impossible to make said Mr road good for automobiles Collier “ao we will make It good for teams and sleighs Automobile traffic for eleven miles on the road Is now Across that space slelgna suspended are used with automobiles to transfer passengers at either end"- - - SOLD Purchased to Protect Mortgage Assets on Claim for 133000 The Lucerne Land & Water trusteecompany sale the at purchasedofyesterday Developproperty the Lucerne Valley its mortgage ment' company on the assets of the former company The 'claim was for approximately in at the property was bought there being no other the same Cfigure L Rood trustee conducted bidders sale at tbe west door of the county the courthouse The sale was a routine proceeding to Interests jot the purchasing protect thewhich had originally concompany veyed the property to the Lucerne Val- a company retaining ley Development on It The mortgage property involved 4000 acres of land In Uintah is some - - to-prote- nd ' - county with water rights accompanying it : PRACTITIONERS ARE LICENSED Five men were given licenses 'to in Utah by the state board of practice Two medical examiners 'yesterday were granted permits on the basis of There were examinations passed and William R George F Davis Ogden Three admitted Bash of Huntington on reciprocity agreement were Thomas J Swisher ofof Rawlins Wyoi WCL EO Bingham —and Heneberger — —- --i liusU of jLo&au - - has-bee- - - ‘ on ' en-'e- - - - Attacked by Dog Which He Attempts to Drive From School Grounds - - With his left arm mangled by the rabid dog W H Sweeten apfangs ofata the office of the state hoard peared of health yesterday and asked for the Pasteur treatment Mr Sweeten is a deputy sheriff and in Malad Ida Thursday his home is was summoned to a counhe morning school In Box Elder county Utah try to drive a dog feared by the students from the grounds The teacher held the youngsters in the building until Ml Sweeten was the officer arrived scene to the by a friend accompanied made the journey in a buggy They On' arrival at the schoolhouse the dog was sighted and Mr Sweeten and approached the animal alighted unarmed The frenzied brute leaped on him and sunk his fangs in his left arm between hand and elbow Rehalfway its for a second the anileasing mal seized grip the victim’s arm near the elbow with the evident intention of working its way to the throat of the man' Mr -Sweeten’s friend leaped from the buggy- and rushed to his aid with a the hammer Sweeten had a grip oncomand his throat of theoutanimalbrains with the beat its panion hammer Froth from the jaws of the animal covered rescuer the bands of Mr Sweeten and his Dr ML J MacFarlane of Cedar City sent the head of a pup to the health board yesterday with the report that had bitten its child owner Pasteur it treatment was ordered for the child William Moss of the Deseret Live Stock company reported that a rabid coyote had attacked one of his in Skull valley but had been driven off before the man had been bitten Scores of dogs bitten by the rabid animals have been killed and others a view to protecting the caged with Hundreds of sheep have been gublio within the month and one last concern in the northern part of the state has lost fifty head of cattle from hydrophobia within the past month Five rabid coyotes have been sighted In Skull valley within the past week to the reports received by according of health L L Da'nes tbe state board tested the heads of five dead animals and found that all had been yesterday from virulent’ rabies suffering Dr Loren Lewis of Lewiston reported to the state board of health last that Percival Kent and a man night named Clark had been bitten eight a dog which has since died days ago by Pasteur treatment for the of rabies two victims was - - $64-0250- 00 y LEAGUE TO ASK BOURBONS PLAN TD Sheep-herde- rs CHANGE IN LAWS Finance Committee Prac - Amendments Proposed by Municipal Association for tically Decides on Salary - ordered INDIAN LANDS OPEN Legislative Action Assessment ’ How the Democratic organ was the subizatlon is to pay its debtscounty discussion at a meeting of the ject of finance committee of the party county held yesterday in the office of Sheriff were the sherJohn S Corless Present iff "Thomas 'Homer t county clerk recorder George H CL Isl&ub county treasurer county Raymond Naylor and B W Mendenhall Democratic chairman county decided that the It was practically assessment shall be 2 per campaign cent of the salary of every county ofof ficial and employee but members no definite the committee stated that action was taken Theonematter of the of the newly $200 check missent by elected Judges to the state organization was not brought up for discussion1 Reservation Tracts In Basin Are Placed on Sale LICENSE DATA Notification was received at the local SEEKING Indian irrisration office yesterday from Officials of Other Cities Requested to Albert H Kne&le superintendent of the ' Uintah and Ouray Indian reservation Give Information that Indian - lands under federal lrri- at the Snow Gordon city recorderKarl ditchea are for sale in the request of Commissioner A Satlon basin for $15 an acre finance the of Scheld department city to a number of the Kneale points out addressed letters Superintendent in the establishment of that the over- - larger cities of the country asking for the government data on their policy as to special liat money the expended cense taxes especially merchants’ bu-lian aero on th© lands thatrate of $1260 censes extensive us©' Scheld has written the enhe with the result that the lakd virtually reau of Mr education and social welfare-of- course research for similar municipal of cost will an $250 acre only adapted obtained from also Hat tire community: has " He The terms in the purchase of the Charles W Lawrence city inappropriate elimination oftenure license asstudy teachof on a forty-acr- e lands basis text hooks Indefinite what are it would sessor $150 showing and worth- down $150 during the first year $150 mean tofigures ers of demonstrated ability in loss of revenue If the city and iness: establishment the miscellaneous licenses were abolto of kindergarten : toproper auditing ished provide5000against safeguard offunds popuof community a necessity from a lation withdrawing to levy school district andassessed tax according to instead of school population property of districts commisMembers of the codifying andf or -sion 'were: Dr E G Gowans Barnes R A mer Attorney General ex officio: I L WilliamsonG superinChild tendent of Tlntlc districtSalt assistant superintendent t Lake city schools W Karl or other entertaining articles in Sunday's will Alpine district A C Matheson ' i AMONG letter: Lake Salt secretary from Percy Percyval-- the chatty London correspondent with installment another of gossip of former 'Utahns in the metropolis This BARKEEPER ROBBED is the third in? the series of letters from The repre: waters-over the sentative include: BY LONE BANDIT will Other features magazine i‘r BERLIN PEELING THE PINGH OF WAR —Being a conformative Under Cash Over to Hand Commanded Tf story of tlie nairowing of the food supplies in the central empire Just how ' of 'Instant jr PenaltyDeath 'L the Teutons are :ineetingG an alarming situation is graphically described ' SHOWING AMERICANS OVER THE SCARRED BATTLEFIELDS- -While flourishing a revolver at last the Sterling Heilig tells how J the "French ' government is- putting itself out ' ty in the face of 70bartender night West N Thlrd North Salt Lake bar a chance to see for' themselves the ‘ruin wrought by war whom he had commanded to hand overa give Americans illustratedl cash r" the1 contents of the register on Finely: v' ' lone highwayman dropped his gun K Vanderbilt MrsW AMERICAN W AN OMAN AT THE FRONT— the bar As the weapon struck it went and her ' more hapless condition of impressions off and sent a bullet crashingisthrough grieved she says over the to the V a front window"" The missile a said over the destruction: of cathedrals l y i people than shoulhave barely grazed the robber hold-ubep WHEN A MULTIMILLIONAIRESS COMES OUT— Andrew Carnegie's der For a moment the him at and shot someone had lieved he dropped to the floor-- ‘ 'However he daughter women in quickly realized what had happened up and regaining his feet be snatched DAN the barthe weapon and commanded ' as Europe tender to hurry bartender Threatened with death the WHY WE SHOULD LIVE TO BE 125— A scientist figures out thatit handed over $1660 to the robber The is of living shorten out bartender says the robber hackeddown folly to die any younger He tells how present habitsabout-"threscore of the saloon and disappearedAnother doctor says: King David was " all' wrong life " ‘ the railroad tracks ' l y SL A and "'y and ten'' FILM SERIALS— Patrolmen Cliff Patten Thomson searched for the highwayman V The Scarlet Runner! and "Liberty " readers THE but without avalLwill find tomorrow's installments of these stories just as engrossing as ever FOUND DEAD If ROOM x POLLY AND HER PALS— Along with other favorites they will greet - Andrew Tarbet-'4V " Buster old was years J' readers "Pa and His found dead on the floor of his room 68 Sunday: - be will: there as usual vr V E Second South street yesterday morn- and Tige? The man who operates the roomSPORTING SECTION — Fully illustrated and containing all the THE ing house found' Tarbet dead when he ing went to call him at 6 o'clock Tarbet news of the sporting realm tlie section will appeal to lovers of athletics and who was unmarried was a mining man sports-There will he a wealth of comment and gossip and the very latest He was a member of the local ' Elks’ local an4 general the going in lodge g? ’1' - - -- t ‘ - r - Hopkix-P®rintend-en- -- Herald-Republic- M an - Herald-Republica- 4 n's ! - - - - - - -- - A - V-- - " - Herald-Republic- Son-in-la- w - an ‘ - : ' : : - fW 'iflth T ' ff "1 ’ - 'ry-V f - ? ' 77-'- -- — T" ' VT 7 s -- 1" - - T ta-ntor- row - - Ly-- - IIcrald-Republlca- a) Ogden Jaa 5— Unless a ahlp meat of coal arrives ia Ogden serious Inconvenience will follow according to Information obtained today There was llttls coal la the yards What little arrived was doled out and none af the larger consumers has any re- serve supply oa hand The mssof the Wyoming Coal comagement with the arrangements pany mademines and Union Pacific Wyoming train of for rushing a tomorrow railway ears to Ogden for twenty this and from present Indications shipment will arrive on schedule an extremely serious INDICATING Bingham F R Rockwell assistant general manager of the Denver & Rio Grande railroad yesreceived the following telegram terday from Q B Kelly president of tho Bingham Commercial club: The Bingham Commercial club backed by citizens urges an emBingham all shipments to bargo on Distress of hay except coal and acute coal shortage is RockIt was stated at Superintendent coal and well’s office that one car of Lake for two cars of hay had left Salt and that the Bingham Thursday nighthad been resituation undoubtedly lieved Grande Officials of the Denver & Rio248 cars railroad stated yesterday that of ooal had been loaded at the Carbon toand that thewas county mines Thursday It tal yesterday would reach 275 the twenty also reported that during noon yesterday at four hours ending -four cars of coal had been spottwenty local for were ted in the Salt Lake yards cars dealers and that forty-si- x afternoon making a spottedof during the cars for local consumptotal eighty tion In addition to this about sixty cars were delivered to the Oregon Short Line for northern points It was also stated from 250 to 300 empties are hetner that sent to the mines In Carbon county the normal demand being about dally 350 cars Locally the situation is fast - - A - ’ - Jf- - -- MAN IS MANGLED - - (Special to The '' - ‘ - - - on com-missi- and Coal n - - com-missi- evidence against snapped the thread ofwasJustice In the racket investigation a cqntemplated There again were conducted along the which corridorand proceedings The Colorado river basin by Haroldcon-D timethird city ‘a stopped of ‘Washington D C its testimony all Padgett finally presented nected with the legal department of only hair and then the case was the United States reclamation service Mr Asby will tell his side or over Mr yesterday arrived in Salt the story next Monday Lake Padgett from the Pacific coast when he W H Way proprietor of the C C Jacob engineer to conferred- with store from which Asby is alleged as in charge of ' the local water resource shoes testified the taken have division of the United States geologifollows: i ' De-- E A Porter former cal survey and' the evening of was “It was23- on The r In charge Leading a crew defendant comber of Investigators down the entire basin door when I for the front making of the Colorado Mr Padgett has asof his coat back the how noticed sembled facts and figures on the river 1 caught him by the colbulged control problem which promise to bear back a piece His lar and ran himand in favor of the creation of great weight I saw a shoe coat flew up dams in Utah for the conservation of of- each of his hip out sticking the waters of the Colorado river basin shoes The grabbed tothe the pockets I'rushed of water rights of the front Investigation defendant conColorado river is being made in tne door through Jumped right junction with the study of storage on the fell and glass plate heavy the engineering divipossibilities him and sidewalk I went after sion for ' the by of developing purpose could he get up before him got some for a the of the Officer Nickson arrived Then flow ofplan Mr the Colorado regulation Padgett ' "Was the man soberr Ashy's These Investigations says have extended witness reasked another attorney into Wyoming Colorado Utah Newas the “Sober enough" vada New Mexico Arizona and Caliply fornia ‘‘He was going wildly was heT" which have been assembled Figures “P“ the attorney “Do youif that said Mr by and his company of inPadgett he have would stopped pose show that the entire Colovestigators had been a brick wall instead of a rado river basin now has a total of elass door?" 1895000 acres of land under irriga“He would have stopped" said tion while the total Irrigable area at witness “when he hit the brick the undeveloped amounts to 4617-00- 0 present wall as hard as he hit the glass acres" Of this' amount 289000 acres Officer Nickson the arresting of land In the basin under Irrigation was questioned by Assistant officer are in Utah and there remain In the City Attorney Walter Little on tho state and within the basin a total of point of the defendant’s sobriety 505400 acres of Irrigable land at presthe influence of “Asby was underbluecoat ent undeveloped said the liquor" he was Iluge Crop Values "What made you believeLittle drunk?1 asked Attorney Mr Padgett shows that the crop at this juncturethethat OfIt was value developed from irrigated lands Nickson revealed police ficer within' the basin amounted to method of Inebriation diagnosis said In Utah the crop value of irwas drunk" “I believed he land within the basin amountrigated Nickson “because of his stylecer-of ed to $7820000 Consequently with the establishment of the control plan delivery of speech of He had a and tongue tain thickness which would result ultimately in the of attitude common with the entire area of Irstupidity irrigationlandof the One of things h&lfsoused men cron value within the rigable a most generally noticed in such Colorado river basin would amount to oonditlon is a careless stupid manmore than $250000000 while the inner His delivery indicated a cercrease in Utah within the basin area thickness of tongue and bewould amount to nearly $140)0000 tain — sides the smell of alcohol was on Information was received in Salt Lake his breath" ' yesterday that Mr Padgett while in “The defense will have its turn San Francisco recently was engaged to next Monday" said Juge John F be married to Miss Mary Luclle Rose! Tobin Dr F N Rose prominent daughter of physician of the Golden Gate city of dollars at an expense' or Inmillions an are - : Howard De Weese has spurned what at first might the authorities thoughtwould lend him that prove something a measure of an alibi He declareda he did not" know Jay Southwick Des whom authorities of veggman Moines la and Denver thought might have been Implicated with De Weese ' In the murder of the latter’s' wife chief criminal Carl C Carstenaen in the sheriffs office does not deputy doubt the integrity of officers who affair but worked on the Southwick was a clevit he is inclined to thick some conceived plot on the part of manerly unknown friend of De Weese to ufacture something that would aid In his defense Since De Weese refused to Identify Southwick and said he did not the (photograph howIt was failed ever recognize the plan If such was The Southwick possibility to the attention of Carstensen brought Denver police- department and by the Smith postofflce inspector The Ralph Denver officers learned that Southwick whom they know as a criminal' had from the west passed through Denver of the De murder the after shortly Weese woman learned that he spent one was he night In They hotel and while a Denver ' a there a man unknown to them left chamois sack full of unmounted diamonds with the proprietor of the hotel to toe given to Southwick The dragnet was set for Southwick up at Des Moines on and he was picked Denver authorities The suspicion were notified and Inspector Smith word of the mater to Carstenbrought sen who received later a photograph ‘ of Southwick In the De to Weese It was shown said he prisoner county Jail hernthe The man in the picture did not know end that he is unacquaintedwas with acThe photograph Southwick to the returned Thursday cordingly Denver offlcera $52-OOOtL- ' - I ' ' : ' TO AID DEFENSE COMPANY t' J - Details of the construction of the are explained in the report '"capltol and ' :'The total cost of the building have-to furnishings is declared --'its on art been $273952183 Debts of the contracts and the completion cement work are enumerated and that the 'the statementon made hand $29000 to take has care of unpaid bills The members of the capltol are William Spry David A R Barnes John-DerLund M S Browning An thon : I and C E Loose - LAW) - ' - DISDAINS CHANCE - in-- ' - - - COMPROMISE REACHED - - - - -i - -- of the city hoard The annual report 1918 will contain a recommendation by T L Irvine chief of of weights and measures the divisionthe standardisation in Utah calling for it is posof all packages of foodstuffs without serious Insible to standardise and terference with trade conditions of the city and the use of the Influence the national state departments with United states government through the to secure the bureau of standards standardization of all food products the country throughout A standardisation of food product Mr Irvine eaid yesterday packages" s'wll! accomplish more toward lowering thing the cost of livingInthan any other with the We'are working conjunction The and of health city state board to the state hoards will recommend standardof a the passage Legislature that the manuising bill We believe it they may oppose althoughbenefited facturers) its reg- -'by 'will be ultimately ulationa Such a bill wouldin not interpackages put fere with the weight states to other for export the of ?The standardisation saved the butter two ago people package $75000 to $100 orfo- anor Utah fromyears to predictions the nually Contrary after its went down price of butter system of markpassage The present on packages has some ing the weight classes who but the poorer advantages do not think need protection the mostwithout objeccontinue it outto They pay the price of a greater tion weight for a lesser weight -- ' need no protection COAL : I - De Wcese Denies Knowledge of Man Thought to Be Accomplice A s: - - - lature for Action 7 RELIEVE TO 'V1' -- - I RIVE - Vehicles St ''in - ut Chief Irvine's Recommendation Will Go to Legis- ASK EMBARGO - a toy STEAM ROLLERS COLORADO C -- - ustice Gets ' ! 1 ' RULES C03IMITTEE REPORTS Prlla-xnentar- i': - SATURDAY JANUARY 6 1917 ' on-deci- ded : - v-- v ? ' i -- ‘ i : ': “' ' - k -- ' : r''tr" v i-- v '" ' - ! " 2'' :'-- -- - In Appointment of Jobs Salt r1' w’i : : -- ' NO LIMIT TO DEBATE ' ( - ' ' v: f Is Commission Urges Step J to Huge Reservoirs in IJtali Complete Reorganization FAMINE Reclaof Com-Erection in Prevent Code t Cheap Contemplated i Proposed! by mation Service Scheme ? Only Thing Yet Settled Is and lUnsightly Buildings w mission in Report O''That Defendant- - Was Bingham Commercial Club failure to that 6 west of the state- - WOULD COST MILLIONS i REVISION pF i L A¥S D5CLARING and Citizens Join in jagged : conIn Plainly the result house may of cheap and unsightly struction lessen 'H and materially ": Appeal for Fuel 'ij buildings ' view of' the capltol case of H Ashy charged the artistic Concluded and J FigSurvey commission of 'shoes of the capltol a pair The astealing Governing Body Proposed members to the governor is be- -v store street State in a report made'that Go and to ures land on tns adjacourt Powers Arguments tried urged in for ing yesterday city SAY DISTRESS IS ACUTE With Enlarged grounds on cent to the capito-1stallment plan " held is " at dlan a t pur-In the first which "an option 'Ashby yCorigress for Action 'v All State’s Schools? $80000 be acquired being show up to put place in a defense Fars°n chase price ofalso recommends that' board tne that under The impression to statEH"'"' authorized had ri®4 Would Stop All Shipments purchase it be for Simpkin or somebody"made ' to Conniches in the rotunda and for delay and presenting Preparations that up uary of things the public reorganization Complete of of art for the embethe plan of harnessing the ColoNo 1 Then the wrong courtgress pair other works with such llishment educational system of Utah schools to That Point Save of Hay as and statehouse main ita tributaries of and rado by river ' was they into shoes of brought laws In governing ana Utah changes of in erounds-- ' reservoirs the creation huge the defendant ' i - t- ''''ey'-- ‘ pose to Curb Privilege of rtl' f - - fc 'vr -- to New Recommendations Infor the Legis- : - Yould Purchase S' a de n t Pie- Legislative "v- ' -- J r f SPEAKERSHIP Bourbon- HERALD-REPUBLICA- N' Salt Lake Gets a y Few Crumbs From RIGHTS FROM v- A - ' ' - ' tT JV ' V - tt f A definite program of amendments to laws affecting municipalities was adopted by the legislative committee of the State Municipal league at its in the office of meeting yesterday Mont Ferry and the com-or Mayor W mittee will meet theof the legislative committee Legislature "steering" in the afternoon 3 at o’clock this various the hotel to discuss measures decided on yesterday law An amendement to the present collection and the levying governing of special improvementIt istaves was on under which proposed agreed cost of paving street inthat half the borne by abutting tersections shall be the entire cost beproperty instead of the shouldered by city as under ing system the presentrecommendation is that Salt Another the Lake’s entanglementthoby reason ofcourt recent decision offor supremo Improveon delinquencies special become dement taxes allowed t be straightened out As ita linquent of is now when one Installment tax becomes despecial improvement is required to sell linquent the city Tho amendout proposed the propertythat the sale need not ment provides be held until the-' - last installment Is delinquent decided on a bill The committee alsoowners to keep property requiring weeds and -mainyacantthelots clear of in front of their tain parking Under the proposed to law property so when a property owner failscan atthe city his holdings maintain becomes & lien tend to it and tho cost The measure Is the property against owners of real estate aimed at absent Another measure approved requires cost of school districts to- payon the to streets improvements special’ which their property abuts As it is now the city making the Improvements must stand the school’s proportion also The subject of automobiles was them taken up and- a bill regulating use of waa drawn It prohibits the confines the within headlights glaring of a city and establishes a definition Is to be construed as a of what “reasonable speed’also discussed tne The committee in the Juvenile court proposed change Sandy law At Its annual meeting in on k few weeks ago the leagu went tne of t abolishing record In favor Th© comini ttee will Juvenile court that concursuggest to the legislators with juvenile Judges ne rent jurisdiction of the peacenoand other given to Justices resident cities in having magistrates Juvenile court Judge New-hou- se - becoming normal Towns Are Fuelless Notwithstanding the fact that the Denver & Rio Grande railroad for the has been delivering past several days and fifty cars of coal between forty to the Oregon Short Line for distributhe towns of southern Idation among ho Montana Oregon and Washington appealing for coal continue telegrams to reach the offices of the mine operatLake The sitcompanies In Salt ing to be distressing In uation many towns in southern Idaho and counties Utah Sanpete and Box Elder fueL are said to be destitute ofwere received While these telegrams in considerable number at the local ofthe fice of the Standard Coal companyShort of the Oregon department freight at Line said none had been received the snow that office while during blockade they were received in large number This is interpreted by Oregon that Short Line officials as Indicating with exists only the shortage ofin coal the towns of southern certain dealers some reason Idaho whose orders forfilled and that or other Lave not been is not as serious as the the situation are short of coal would dealers who lead the public to believe in order that their individual coal shipments might be rushed Telegrams received at the local office of the Standard Coal company yesterfamine still exday indicate that a coal Soda Springs ists at Montpelier Pocatello Idaho Falls American Falls Blackfoot and all points on the St Anthony and TwinLineFalls in branches of the Oregon Short Idaho and in some of the towns of Cache valley Draper Mount Pleasant and Ephraim the At Mount Pleasant and Ephraim exhave reached the situation is saidAtto Mount Pleasant the treme point schools were not open this week and doubt is expressed that hey will be open next week Mc-Camm- on BUTTE WOMAN SUES to Says She Was Deprived of It as Result of Illegal Assessment - - ' - - MAY SHABE CHOICE mm stock 1 Seeking to regain possession of 2000 shares of stock of the Emma Copper company Jehnle Sullivan of Butte Mont filed suit in the federal court She alleges that she has yesterday been deprived of the stock illegally the result of an assessment exacted by members of the board of directors of when they the Emma Copper company Included her holdings which she comwere nonassessable plains The plaintiff sets forth that she purchased the 2000 shares of nonassessable J W Pollock Emma CopperR- -stock from Snow & Co of Salt Lake & Co and F is on June 15 1907 Nevertheless itthe a tf meeting that during alleged board of directors on August 16 1909 an assessment was levied block which eluding the nonassessable - - hCornplaint Is made that when she en1°° rece?ili to transfer her had 0 OF JUVENILE JUDGE deavored it she discovered that While the stock was for assessments Feels It Should Be of purchased by the value when County CommissionMatter little as County Consulted In plaintiff it now commands a price of ’ - pays Part of Salary $211 a share may have a WATEBWOBKS FUNDS The county commission the Juvenile a judge of decided hand in naming that court It has practically will be made Pre-- some sort of suggestion Report Covering Past Three Years Gov Simon Bamberto line that It receives a similar sugalong unless pared 'by That Departmeat ger a renort showing that revenue of from him gestion 7 The subject was brought up at yes- S?eeWye1S0roU‘tro”VoH?ST of the - commission meeting terday’sChairman H&nchett Iafayette when of the candidates for stated tli&t one had informed him that he appointment the commission was to be understood consulted in the appointment since it a part of the Judge’s salary pays No action was taken but the suggesthe board consult tion was madeinthat the matter or that a the governor communication informing him that the advised commission would like to be final action on the ap- -e before he takessent to the chief execu-ivbe ?ointment The subject was dropped after-brief discussion with the understanding that ' it is to he brought up again - a ‘ —— Monday c j J jf-- - 0Vhnf7T?rtmnlxce?'ir revenue was prepared yesterday by E Commissioner A Bock city auditor for dof the waterworkshowetriment f thewasexpenditures for Irrigation ever $4612154 of the waterworks dewhich of ficials should hot be partment maintain accounts Were their against charged the charges the from deducted sum that would be $3440760 below expenditures ‘ Bu L 5 the revenues©ontendft th© d©p(irt thit Shc&rin&n to turn a ment would have been able fund each of balance into the general (he past three years — " r”11 N |