Show - ' l£y$i ‘i'rr 'f y - 1 THE 1 ' HEEALD-EE2UBLICA- N -- s - t - - a 'V- ON BIG TRACT - Sites y ' ’ Mosida Lands' - ’' on the west slopes are reported to be shore of Utah lake Included In a of Denver capital In the raising of sugar lets to engage plan rebeets on a mammoth scale It IscomAmerican the that Sugar portedof Denver is behind the enterpany The soil has been deprise in the state for clared superior toalready any sugar beetanraising examination of the lands During from the standpoint of railroad ' proxof the prospecrepresentatives imity made a study of distive investors tances in the immediate district acto Information received last cording The of a railroad from night building' on the Denver & Rio Mosida to Alberta is Grande a distance-oeight miles to the being considered in addition automoconstruction of an bile truck road over the same courseesThe icvlval of the old plan of a water route over tablishing the ah lake to freight the nearest point of east Rio Grande which skirts the shore line of the lake is reported to be under consideration Engineers of the Utah-ldah- o company conSugar cluded in the course of Investigations of several years ago that the water route would not be profitable in the would of beets since hauling to be handled so manythey times that have it would render the water route unBut these obprohibitive dertaking stacles may be overcome in new water methods under consideration However it is admitted in financial Circles that the new effort to make In the Mosida tracts highly profitable the raising of sugar beets will oe undertaken this spring and that thousands of acres of b£ets may be grown for the fall harvest It is said also that the plan Includes speculationMosi-t-on lj the erection of a sugar plant at Were most of the lands in that i Ighborhood cultivated in sugar beets the production would be sufficient to support one nf the largest sugar beet factories in the state Promise of a railroad from Alberta to Mosida was given by the Denver & Rio Grande three years ago if definite steps were taken to bring about sufficient development for the support of a branch line This development will take it is reported with the revival place of Interest ln the Mosida lands and improvements representing more than $100001)0 may be made in the west shore district thts year Mosida al- has a fashionable hotel ready A B Irvine- attorney for the receiver of the Mosida Land company which has been in financial straits learned with Interest yesterday of the movements which are on foot to revive Interest in the Mosida tracts By a system of pumping water from the lake to the higher levels of the land to the lake shore the nlfich dip down lands are directly subject to Irrigation - - f ar - QUESTIONS MARRIAGE WIFE GETS DIVORCE Husband Had Raised luue of Legality f Mine Other Decrees Are (ranted by Court husband had raised the Thoughasher to whether or not they had question ever been legally married Margaret Fiske obtained a divorce yesin the Third district court from terday Frederick Fiske The defendant in the case is manager of the American Radiator company and a prominent bustness man lie contested the suit but an was reached out of court agreement uii icli does not show in the decree to the granted yesterday Nine other decrees wereplaintiff allowed durthe weekly divorce matinee They ing were issued in the case of Elizabtli Christensen against ‘Hyrum Christensen Mary Harton against William Harton Annie Eight against Dennis E Eight Carrie Hardman against Christian Hardman Elva Parks against lames W Parks Ethel I Tonge against William A Tonge Bessie Chapmen Bertha against Horace N Chapman Kiefer and Kiefer Joseph against Irene Roberts Smock against John Mac-Coo- l Kl-in- er ' Smock FUND IS EXHAUSTED Federal Health' Agent Figuring' on Usury to Continue Campaign S E Piper and G E Holman of the federal biological survey held a conference with the state board of health to discuss means of yesterday anirabies among the predatory offiing mals of the state Both federal cials have been in the west several months waging a war against coyotes As a result of their campaign thousands of animals have been killed but the federal appropriation has been exhausted and the conference yesterday was held to discuss ways and means of the warfare on the predacontinuing animals tory The federal officials say the danger to the herds of the state has been on account of the greatly Increased prevalence of rabies Declare in Explanation ofr'':'Actori: SAY FUEL SHORTAG E STI LL PR EVAI LS A Truly Delightful Story DSow 60c The Whole Family Will Enjoy It 44 East on South Temple P TRAINS U ARE STALLED IN WYOMING! ' - ? Coal P r o be : to - - - - - Woodruff-Sheets-Morr- - - - - - t - - V r 'V - Mrs Helen Moormelster ster - - 1 - - 89 care-168S116- - - - - - officer said” - More Ilnmorona to - fPake-of- fs K Smithy impersonating Moon was Introduced A T anwith the nouncement that he desired to explain the something about party Mr Smith arose andProgressive began reading from a voluminous manuscript but he had scarcely started when from an adtable around which sat the joining members of the city- commission a heated discussion began completely Mr Smith’s efforts to be drowning I CL Area of ' Beet Cultivation iptlon The commissioners were as follows: Mayor Ferry represeated city P by Heber Wells by J J WhitCompleted by Next Season PakerJenson W H Shearman Edward Penrose Herman Green bybyDana T Smith and Karl A Scheid by William Krause r ENTUALLY 8000 acres of land the part of Commissioner Shearman Mr Penrose cultivated in sugar beets will Acting made an impassioned be added aa an important source to toe increase the the mayor appeal for the factory of the Utah-ldah- o of his chief clerk to $250 a salary at 8panish Fork month and he took a rap at the railSugar was company announced yesterday it roads and others who have been scored by T R Cutler the sugar company's as responsible for the by the public not This will develop coal manager general to menshortage forgetting a from the extension of railroad tion the members of the Legislature from Spanish Fork to Benjamin One of the big hits of the evening The road will be completed before was an eloquent address by Francis the beet harvest season next fall of the circuit imMurphy Pantages F ' Tolton speaker of According to surveys which have J personating been completed and initial steps for the House “Look at the trouble we construction work that has comhave in the house of mlsrepresenta-tlvea- ’ directmenced the railroad will go he sajd "the greatest body of north from the sugar factory men that money can buy’ ly a and In direction then A travesty on a utilities westerly commission north to Palmyra It then will be was W R Putnam acting by presented run directly through Lake Shore7 as chairman the Rev p A Slmpkin and south to Ben jamlfL The terA G McKenzie and J K Hardy forminus probably will be half a mile mer to the governor It was secretary west of the Mormon house the railroads meeting ruled that do not come ' at The Benjamin which under the of the commisjurisdiction be will lands pierced sion because "do not do anythey now are cultivated the railroad by as servants” public thing it was 1000 acres of sugar beets of a In moved that the telephone company be Last year very superior 'quality fined $1000 every time It allows one was hauled to the1 of this beet crop its operators to arouse a subscriber and trucks factory bytoteams after midnight esis of lack It Owing grades "Well I don’t believe ’nothIn be that the railroad timated may ” broke doing in Parson ing for nothing built for approximately $100000 "and I would like to Inquire Slmpkin ' to 1 are the powers of the utilities what ight commission anyway?” and in' turn the - railroad passes "Oh we have plenty of latitude” rethe sugar beet district in a through sponded Chairman Putnam "we can manner- to make it most convenient appoint- all of our - friends and relafor the loading of the beets along ”J tives to jobs” a) the rout The banquet was served under the direction of George H Cranfield house manager of the club and It was perfect in every detail even to the serving of the plum pudding The Guest List who attended the banthose Among PETITION IN BANKRUPTCY the quet were Gov' Simon Bamberger C M D D Rev Joseph 8- Glass Rt Mike Pejnovich a laborer of Tooele Rfiled a' petition in bankruptcy in the Byrne W W E' Badger II WN Mont court yesterday-iUnited States which Armstrong1 Mayor FerryC W A Walker L H Farnsworth he places his liabilities at $25870 and H' A E Culbertson Samuel excepted-assetat $20 Quigley M Jennings I C will Newhouse Frank Tomorrow's be brimful ofi'newsand features as usual' Among the magazine of ferlngs will he: vf and Mystic Rasputin Rnzzlan Monk and Ills Strange Fate— Something - i f the character who wielded a singular power over the 'mighty czar i How Germany Weathers the Finan: " - He itl - - - PECKHOFF IN ce - - - Extension From Spanish Fork to Benjamin Will Be - - - - rs be-o- re - - - on the troop border was designated Utah squadron of major ofintheanfirst order signed yester-on cavalry day- by Governor Bamberger recommendation of Maj1 W G Williams adjutant general of Utah Major WilMajor Bourne succeeds liams as squadron commander the been made vacant position having when Major Williams was made general adjutant Major ’Bourne entered the National - Guard of Utah nearly fifteen instrumental years ago and was of old troop in the organization A one of the first cavalry organizations to be established He advanced to captain of the troop and continued in that capacity until ordered the the federal government converted Into a signal corps troop Placed In command of the signal corps Major Bourne developed effifor which the organization ciency was complimented during maneuvers in Wyoming not only by reguan atlar army officers but bywho was tache of the British army field movements the came at present The compliment chiefly from-' the apeurate and speedy transmtsslon of wireless messages in the field When it was concluded early in 1910 by the war department to orseveral cavalry regiments In ganize the west the ' signal corps was into a troop of again converted Its old name of troop A cavalryrestored beingwas also learned from Major It Williams yesterday that William C Stark former secretary of the Salt Lake Commercial club and a dehad scendant of Gen John Stark been commissioned second lieutenserfrom ant He wasofpromoted second squadthe geant major ron of cavalry- in service on the Mexican border to the lieutenantcy on recommendation of Maj W B Wallace squadron commander and In turn by Major Williams the adnow third generalofand he is jutant of Provo In command F troop which he helped to organize - - - ‘ CAPT - - d CAPT E LEROY BOURNE y" E LEROY BOURNE who un-confln- ed' - Branch-Roa- post-offi- the three years than during the past asked that the banquet ing be postponed until he could reach the city The unanimous vote was: “Go on with the banquet and let Joy be The gridiron features kept the banin a roar The queters daughter arrows of wit struckoffar wide and and there were few of the men in the public eye who escaped a ' “panning” Much of the comedy of the occasion was due to the courtesy of Frank Newman of the Pantages theatre who contributed a number of headliners-tthe success of the evening John S Critchlow toastmaster was in the middle of a speech and had just informed the banqueters that he and Governor Bamberger were at one time more closely associated together than at presentr-whe- n were both they waiter “broke” when a colored stumbled and dropped a tray of dishes to the floor with a crash The waiter was admonished Mr Critchlow1 who asked him why by he was there The waiter who In private life Is one of the Pantages stars replied he was there to wait on the “I never waited on table “gemmen” bef o said the waiter “and I’se a horse driver by 'perfesslon but I guess I kin wait on table if I gits a 'good start” At this a Chinaman forced his way Juncture banquet hail against the protest of the bell boy and began an attack on the colored waiter him with falling to pay rorcharging a dish of chop suey A heated k argument followed and the Chinaman was told by the colored waiter that he was "stand-in- ’ in de do’ of a hospital and-- hearse is on de way” The their pair closed stunt by singing a familiar both song In the spotlight -- - en-lnee- ' - ' With hundreds of passengers being cared for in hotels and restaurants in Laramiee and Rawlins Wyo while the twenty-nintrains on which they reached those points are stalled in more than four feet of snow with apparentno signs of an abatement of the terly rific storm which has been raging for diseveral days the entire Wyoming vision of the Union Pacific railroad i In the wintry grip of the vorsV tied stormupin the history of that state Local hotels report the arrival of few guests from the east and west and mails due in Salt Lake were from fifteen to twenty-fiv- e hours late accordofficials It may be necing to postal essary toto double the force at the clear up the accumulated mall which Is arriving on late trains it was announced at the postoffice last night A from Laramie last night said dispatch that the snow which was driven by a strong north wind had filled th cuts between Rock River and Hanna ana brought traffic on the entire ‘system to a standstill After the blockade had been temporarily broken late in the afternoon permitting the pastrains railsage of several eastbound road officials announced that additional equipment was necessary to buck the huge snowdrifts The twelve trains which stood all day yesterday In the Laramie yards began moving westward last night when it Was announced that snowplows had succeeded in opening one of the tracks west of that point The progress of the however is uncertain as a setrains vere storm was berotween Rawlins andreported Hanna raging Heavy taries were ordered to the scene from Cheyenne and it was expected they would be able to break the blockade by tonight with four Big rotary snowplows Mogul engines behind them were unable to penetrate the deep drifts in some of the channels Snow in the cuts is from eight to ten feet deep as solid as ice An and packed almost laborers is at work army of section the snow from around the digging trains where the rotary plows cannot be operated the east bound for Pasiengers from California other western points and are being cared for in hotels In various towns along the line and the comIs paying all the bills Dining pany on cars the stalled trains are provisioned for several days so there Is no fear that the hundreds of passengers will starve General Manager "William Jeffers of the Union Pacific is one of the passenLaramie He was regers interned to havejitbeen making every efported fort to get the trains through but the task Is a difficult one and officials of the road here would not venture a statement as" to when the first train would arrive' As many of the mall cars as possible will be attached to the first passenger trains to get through the blizzard No are moving in the Wyfreight trains district and none are exoming storm pected to move until all of the twenty-nin- e stalled passenger trains have been cleared - - - Snow-Fille- d Passes - - Mrs-Moormel- Passage Through - - - Snowplows Unable to Drill - - the-mil- m In the midst of mirth good cheer and took part in the anrevelry those who of the Salt Lake Comnual banquetwere not unmindful of the mercial club late Fisher1 Harris the first secretary of the club and by whose efforts as an the club became organizer as one of the institutions established of the on and of John S city 'suggestion Critchlow the toastmaster a standing toast was drunk in- his memory as the opening feature of the banquet Rivaling in appointment witticism and any former occasion of travesty the kind in Salt Lake the banquet was one of the most enjoyable affairs In the history of the organization It was marked by the presence of the" state and city executives members county of the clergy and representative professional and business men of the city and Btate F C Richmond president of the club who was stormbound somewhere in Wyoming in an effort to reach Salt Lake in time to be present wired his regrets ' and fuitlclpatlng a of prosperity for the state great periodnext dur- wife of Dr Frank Moormelster who was fatally injured early Thursday in an automo-bil- e accident in' Santa Monica' CaL was robbed of approximately $400 accordfrom Los Antp a report: received ing - F W Goodrich drilast geles nightver of the machine In which Mrs Moormelster Is being held on a criminal charge1 Mrs Moormelster : left Salt Lake to eV®ral"days-aga few weeks in climate spend of California Dr Moormelster had planned to make the with but he trip had some serious cases among his patients and deferred the journey Dr and Mrs Moormelster lived at the Newhouse hotel The report from Los last Angeles says: “A missing night chatelaine containsilver $200 In money that was ing more than carried by Mrs Helen Moormelster when she was fatally injured in the automobile wreck at Santa Monica added mystery to the early case today when an death yesterday into the crash "was started inInquest the beach and the verdict was the holding city of F W Goodrich driver of the auto on a charge' of guilty ' of criminal “Mrs Moormelster died at the St Catherine hospital several hours after she- was riding turned the car -in which e turtle “Dr Frank Moormelster of Salt Lake husband of the dead woman was delayed In his arrival in Los Angeles that held up the Salt by a snowstorm was Lake not present when train and I the inquest opened “Mrs C Brownson of the Mary An4083 Monta avenue gelo apartments Mrs Moormelster lived told the where Santa Monica ' police that when the woman left home Thursday evening she pinned a roll of hills Inside her shirtwaist She also said that the silver purse carried by Mrs - Moormelster contained almost $200 “After the crash neither the roll of bills nor the silver purse was found to the Santa Monica offiaccording cers “The inquest was' to determine If Goodrich the driver of the machine In which Mrs Moormelster was riding was to be charged wlthrckless drivor Goodrich was at ing the St manslaughter Catherine hospital under onpoa lice guard and was officially held of - reckless driving charge "Patrolman Beryle of Santa Monica contended that Goodrich was racing his car with a machine driven by William Kreiter of Los Angeles' who was said the Santa Monica officers to have by been accompanied by two young women These women could not be found although Kreiter has their names the - : BLOCKS “MAIL SERVICE h'L e ’ Laramie C i s - i Element of Mystery Added Governor State g City and to Fatality by Discovery County Officials and Busi- ness Men Present : of Vanished Purse - ' Hundreds of Passengers Arc Marooned in Hotels at ' i price coal reasonably easy will be $6 a ton for dut and $625 for liimp conference a Agreement on this advance in delivery was arrived at during between the managers of ten retail coal companies which took place yesterday : afternoon at the Salt Lake Commercial club merno manner will retail coal 'In chants profit-bthis advance said W C4 Worley manager of the Standard Fuel company last night "The plight of coal drivers attempting to deliver coal on the east bench at the rate of 75 cents a ton has been pitiful It costs $5 to shoe a horse ' the price of hay and grain is away up and under present conditions of the streets beyond the business district the haul of coal proves long and tedious The advance of 50 cents a ton will go to the drivers Teamsters' unions have asked no advance: However we con- WiR Be Thorough Legissidered that the increase in order to to give coal dr jyers an opportunity lative Committeemen Say live has become imperative Mr Worley said that the condition Will Testify of the streets had contributed largely Many added that to the coal difficulty He to dedrivers had' found It difficult liver coal to apartment " houses and INVESTIGATION of- the shortage' of at Monday night residences on the east bench that it comJoint Hotel the the Utah aftan of by required a forenoon and part of the Legislature ' appointed by ernoon in some Instances to deliver a mittee and President Funk of the Senate ton of coal and that drivers frequently Speaker Tolton perHouse All subof the 75 the coal for sons who can throw light upon the had refused to deliver 'Coal ject are invited by the committee to apcents a ton The Fischer-Kittl- e and give their evidence For witcompany' recently increased its price pear nesses who fail to appear summons will of coal be Issued and will be taken before is Ellas S Woodruff of the the- committee they by the sergeant-at-arm- s Coal company presided of the Senate and others present at theWmeeting of The Joint committee consisting Westwere J Wolstenholme ofG the Senator Dern of Salt Lake - Senator Smith of Evans ern Fuel company George of Salt Lake and Senator Parker the Martin Coal company John Rudy Weber of and Representatives South-Wic- k McCoal of the Federal Fischer-Kittl-company Ray comUtah Wlddison of Weber of e Coal Donald of the Lake and - Bennett or of Salt Raleigh pany" W C Worley of the Standard Cardon met in the Senate committee of the rooms and Fuel company Henry Fernstrom Senorganized S Lewis R Coal company Bamberger chairman comator Dern was chosen yesterday of the Marsh Coal company E H mittee and Representative Wlddison O’Brien of the Citizens Coal company decided that the It was secretary Fuel of the Andrews 'Grant and Jeremy ' committee should be of the meeting company held at night in the downtown district o Material" Betterment The Hotels Utah was tentatively seconas the place for holding the was conference it the During there had been no improve- lected cluded hearing that The members of the House commitment in the coal shortage situation but tee said they were willing to spend the the warmer weather doubtless that Efforts greater part of their time in going would alleviate inconvenience it regarding made to show that more people deeply into the situationcauses wfre for the were out of coal -yesterday than during of Importance that the failure of the coal supply te deany previous day- in January In addithe termined and the blame placed Senate tion they endeavored to &show-thaRio Grande members said that the probe should be claim of the Denver the coal situation was improving thorough that Senator Dern announced that- he was erroneous men mine operators J D Ken worthy assltant general hoped the railroad come forward volunof the and dealers would and passenger agent out freight a tarily and give the committee every Denver & Rio Grande gave of Information they could in 'refstatement yesterday that during the whit hours ending at midnight erence to 'the coal situation Reports twenty-fou- r 25 the Denver ft Rio Grande that the railroads refused to establish January reduced rates for storage purposes during handled into Salt Lake for Salt Lake 229 be gone into by the summer willrumors beyond coal proper and destinations the that rates the Utahseven the committee and notcarloads of coal from mine operators had the given mines During the same period deliv- to the dealers in order that they might cars of coal for Salt Lake were Provo store coal during the sumiper are to at ered to the Salt Lake Route over their figure in the to be taken to destinations inquiry Possjbly one of the most Interesting lines the testimony to be general features wlllbe F R Rockwell assistant of the Denver the Denver & Rio Grande employees given by manager of the that an ft Rio Grande It was said that the day desaid last night during and trainmen will appear of coal were additional forty cars in the committee and testify Salt Lake and that the livered to coal yards with a large number of cars of coal length of the coal trains together that were on their way to Salt Lake lor bad motive power Is directly responfor the coal shortage-- Senator yards in the morning sible delivery to coal Dern said this phase of the situation messages from Sugar Telephone conwould be gone into thoroughly YesHouse received last night that of the railroad men’s ditions In that section had not been terday a number committee were in consultathat relieved It was also declared legislative little coal on tion with the committee members of Forest Dale had hut very Househand Lack of coal also resulted in the“We are going to try and get to the of work at the Utah the abandonment In Midvale where tottom of this matter said Senator Iron & Steel100Works Dern “We invite everyone who has Ike men are employed upward of the coal situation formation regardingwe More Equitable Rates comet- forward will summon to received to a message by railroad officials dealers and mine According opfrom the erators Orem officials yesterday not We do want to be & Rio burdened with hearsay and rumors We headquarters of the Denver that inGrande at Denver It is indicated we want to want and facts the get as more equitable coal rates soon will be vestigation over with as soon poscoal fields Utah the between in vogue sible” but the and points in Utah incounty Lake Governor Bamberger yesterday reSalt rates will not apply a telegram from Mayor ceived anhave The Orem road officials secured an of Eureka urging that he- do road has nounced that the relieve the coal situation somethingcoal cars and for that there Thetogovernor of took up the matInterchange carload in now coal send company can ter officials and rerailroad with the Its line 'The lief was promised at once lots to stations all along move they consider will be of great in both ends value to the consumers Balt Lake county SAY UNCLE SAM’S of Utah county and in This is especially true - of points off the steam lines CITY CENSUS FIGURES Leon Bone special agentof of the Justice United States department announced that he had received replies ARE 10000 rSHY the to federal Inquiries regarding and handling of coal from shipment the Cameron the Utah Fuel cortipany LAKE has a population of Coal Coal company theFischer-KittlBamberger SALT according to an estie Coal and the company while other mate out by the census given are companiesstatecompany in bureau Washington yesterday their be to rushing reported The figures are an approximate of ments 1 1916 population July Ogden Utah's second largest city is credited with 81404 on the same date and Provo is estimated to contain 10645 souls publishers'- and school Directory officials when asked for their opinion ofHhe estimate said last night that in the case of Salt Lake the were at least 10000 short figures of the actual population of the city TIE-U- P - : - Za-brls- - -- 1 - kie - - - - - - :: - - - - - - - - - - 1 - '- - Foray on Statekouse Avails Not But Progressives Patient Will Call Again - - - - - s - leaders of the state yesProgressive made their appearance in the terday office of Governor Bamberger for ’consultation regarding appointments which the state are to be ' filled throughout see the governor - as but they did not with affairs of state he was too busy A T Moon Proto listen to politicscommitteeman-gressive national Livingston was sup-in ported by W Doffice the late the governor's he was duringJoined aftenoon where by osSenator Wesley K Walton to Thegovthe tensible purpose of the visit to ernor was to- urb that he appointwho office a number of Progressives have been Indorsed by the Progressive After state and county committees two hours more the than for waiting they withdrew and vdeclared delegation ' would return again' Mr Moon asserted that the governor had sent for the Progressive delegation and it was learned that the delegation indorsements The appeared armed with made between the is being fight which of the Progressive county committee and the state committee is said party to have been responsible for theofdelethe at the office gation executiveappearing - -- - - cial Stress of War-- A review of Teuton methods of making ends meet in y trying times' Uncle Sun Leading in Education— A review of the work of the federal department under direction ' of Philander P Claxtonj’y:r: Mere Roys' Winning Fame in Aerial Fighting —Achievements of the young-of sters attached to the aviation corps the entente' allies'- many of them v Americans' ' Great Ilrl tain’s Possessions Standing LoyaL— Despite efforts to seduce them they :arq stanch friends of the empire x and helping in its battles A Millionairess’s Dream 'to Help Children— How 'Who Is to wed next spring will‘a'girl the Flagler milspend a lion - Tfie Conquering' Girl— A drawing by Dan Smith handsomely colored How Right Sleeping 'Aids Health and Heautyj— With' plenty- of hints for the - -- There’s a weallh of comfort and convenience in an ' 4 Neal C C Campbell A HA De Nike J HydeN W (Sockrell Harold Goff Wesley Davis Edward Rosenbaum Rosenbaum A N McKay F V A G MacKense George D L PierAlder D Fred Stauffer A son R Froiseth Frank E Johnson R J Armstrong Richard E Froiseth L C Brooks M I GraJohn Brooks Hall T C ham Carlyle W W E McFell T Butler A B PemStevenson broke ' H Pembroke Ben E Roberts E C W R Putnam T De Witt Foster Allen Morehouse J C II Schmidt G Farrell Charles Morehouse Will Kearns J Tvnfr Robert Wilson--KeithA Fred Oden rT Edghelll David F H Hempstead James F Kelly H Theodore Burrows a Timmerman S B Buck Mayne Peter Middleditch V- O Macy B Decker Tuttle Joseph W I Arthur Benapn F SchribnerH G K Smith Dunkley Sweet J W IL Lovesy A J Elggren MHerman JohnC Harms Daniel Alexander son Emil II All bach William H Caine M O Culton W H Booth Jr Pykc James A Stumpf J A 'Malla lb C H Wells P Nalder A WillK Hardy R H Williams 8 'Spencer iams John K Hardy DCritchlow ArW N: Williams John Sf T Wright Parley thur Kuhn Ogden Ogden George S- Glen OgdenOgden Ftz-Gera- V - J - -- F-l- A AC-Tresed- 'j &?' v y' f SE'ivIV 4 ' ' fv- s $'iv : 4a ? J : - - ’r "'’ly''1-'- " I’A "i'-- - ' - ' fair aexv' The Sporting Section— Filled 'with the latest - and most- ' Interesting in sporting news illustrated with' comment and gossipThe Comic Section— All the old-tifavorites make their customary Sunday - j "J tv ' ’ CORTINAPHONE mornjng bow ‘ - - The-thaw Salt Lake Security & Trust Company : - x : - v y V s' - v- r J : - - - W : "r k 7 Method gnpUcJiiiCMff - me h Learn LANGUAGES By January Thaw - - - - (BP HEN A H THIESSEN section States the United director ofbureau - consulted v weather-- ' instruments yestermeteorological certain that the Janseemed day hethaw arrived For the uary time in had more than a month the first above the thermometer registered yesterat 6 o’clock freezing pointand the noon hour at morning dayhad 38 degrees above reached it ' zero1£L became apparent In the business district where pools began the hut outside of the forming ''conwarmer weather seemed tocity tribute tp the settling of the loose snow Mr Thiessen explained that this settling which will be gradual will tend to solidify the snow to the extent that it will not furof moisture nish an overabundance when the spring run-o- ff begins : -- i half-conscio- us - pay-me- - '- Despondent over 111 health Mrs Albert II McKeel SO years of age wife of a local street car conductor took a of poison yesterday afternoon quantity in her apartment at 531 E Fifth Soutn street She was found an hour later and rushed to the emergency hospital where she died as officers were placing her on the operating table According to her husband Mrs McKeel was in Jovial spirits when he left for work yesterday morning He reat noon for lunch and turned home found her in what he says was an exmood He kissed her tremely happy good-by- e at the door and the next he saw of her was her lifeless body in the hospital The McKeels were married nine years ago in Kansas City and came to Salt Lake last July They had no children husband says caused her' and this her to become despondent at tlmea McKeel told the' police the poison which ended been in the house for eight her life had years who owns the house In Earl'Trigea which the McKeels lived called to make some repairs to the roof When he entered the room he says he found Mrs McKeel sitting in a in a chair Asked If she was condition 111 told him she had says she Trigea taken the poison to end her life about an hour before She was rushed to the emergency hospital but was beyond medical aid when she arrived there Can be used on any Diae rimMba : - We V have many to choose from and youstyles may buy v on the- payment- plan It you' wish The curling Irons are priced at $300 to $450 - v ’ Utah: Povfer & Light Co Efficient PnMlo Service TL 655: or 656 Bldg '' C ' ? “'s' ‘ '"- : er Woman Expires as Officer Was Placing Her on Cot in Emergency Hospital features of our 6 per cent Tax- free" Secured Certificates —we all- -nt guarantee the solntely ana in- of both principal — v terest These 6 per cent Secured are based on Certificates ' chosen real estate of carefully assured value and they are available in denominations of You are $400 and upward ' to comxnunlinvited cordially 'Y cate with us in person or by letter or telephone of Invest- attractive form regarding this ment L - ld DIES QUICKLY Will Be Gradual t v - v r J Principal Ji r and Interest Guaranteed This is one of the " t - J— II y ' ::r‘ h : TAKES POISON ' - y ASKS 510000 DAMAGES suit Sarah Ellen isherwood has filed in the federal court against ' the Mountain States Telephone & Telegraph damages alleged company for $10000 to have been Jnf licted op her daughter aged 9 The complaint recites that the little girl was run down by an auto and owned by the telephone company comThe telephone Injured seriously in Its that the litpany asserts was trying reply to "steal” a' ride tle girl when the accident occurred Lieutenant Detained In Wyoming Arrives for Lecture Today to Lieut Zlnovi Peckhoff who was have lectured last night at the Hotel Utah for the benefit of the fatherless children of France was delayed In a tie-u- p on the Union Pacific yesterday in Wyoming He wired the committee in charge of the lecture late last night however that he would arrive in Salt Lake early today be The lecture will given this afternoon at 4 o’clock in the Hotel Utah A is extended to everygeneralto invitation be attend The subject will body “The life of the French soldiers In the trenches” Frank A Robinson Wesley E King Charles C Fisher James P Bouzek Casey KenJ DMcLeod Backes J A De Arthur J Kelly W L worthy W F Jensen L IL Harding F W J B Whitehill A P Spitko Homung C A Faus Qua Vogeler C J Stillman I Hanchett Merits Bamberger Clifford L Butler S D Evans & R - - -- an Herald-Republic- - - - Sunday School Union BOOK STORE WITH FIRST SQUADRON - MAJENTO VICTIM’S MONEY GONE - "yy-'- v By Phoebe Erey IS DESIGNATED MAJOR ' y ' ' T tar be all-ye- BOURNE IS PROMOTED ! that-th- tracts extending out through over FERTILE and reaching far ' tV' advanced American Sugar Company Declared to Be Interested in Mammoth Scheme ’ Action Follows Probe Into Commercial CluB 3 Banquet East Bench Consumers to Pay 50 Cents a)Tbn Killing of Mrs Dr Frank Featured by Brilliant Wit-- ! ° ) ticism and Clever Skits I r Moornieistero" ncrease Goes to Teamsters Retailers' - cost of the delivery of coal along tjie east bench will' be THE 75 cents a ton to $125 a ton beginning today which means SPLENDID of coal to residents beyond streets wherer gravel continues future SAID ' “ " - Morp Denver Interests Reported Behind Plan to Develop - f lANNUAt DINNER SUGAR BEETS SOIL lMT'" CHAUFFEUR HELD MAKE MERRY AT MAY PR0DUC1 7':v7-- : w ' : ' w ' - V' -- Music Co (H) St Salt Lake Utah Gentlemen — Please send me full par ticul&rs and SPECIAL TERMS on youc Cortinaphone Language Course Daynes-Beeb- e 45 Main - N'ahie Address 0699ssa4 |