Show THE WEATHER SECOND NEWS SECTION Thursday and Friday fair not milch change --: SAIT LAKE CITY UTAH THURSDAY AUGUST 2 's 1917 EEGEN8 IN OGBEN SHOWNDOORAS BARS SUCCEEDED ANSWER TO QUERY ( ABOUT ARRESTS ' V' - — - f - Saloon Proprietors in In yentory Find Little Liquor Still in Stock ‘ ! - - - : - Police on Lookout to Prevent Operation of : - - Bootleggers ness-there- - ' ’ - - ' - t - RcnlARtpibllcu Sptebl Ogden Aug: passed through the first dajr of state-wid- e prohibition and found the experience not unpleas ant Quiet such as follows a holiday Prevailed throughout the - city1- There were few arrests and no disturbances - or-"mat- lon ' Special aa 1—One hundred and twenty registrants of the Weber counexemption district which Includes ty all of Weber county outside of Ogden have been given notice to appear for physical examination This Is twice the number which the county Is required to furnish but members of the exemption board are of the opinion that more than the 120 must be examined before the ' 60 persons are obtained Dr G W Baker Is the 'examining Physician ' of the ' county exemption board He will examine ' forty- registrants next ' Monday forty more Tuesday ' and the remaining ‘forty t the exemption board's Wednesday headquarters In the county building Aug - - - EXAMINE FOR : upon the streets Sounds of hammers - pounding and haws ’bussing emanated from the sev eral establishments which were saloons prospective - soft yesterday but were establishmentsto drinks and billiard day Before the end of the week there should be a surprisingly large number of new businesses In operation succeed saloons lng theSullivan-DruThe company and the George W Murphy saloon were the first to file with the county clerk the amounts of alcohol and other Intoxicants they have In stock Such reports need not be filed until tomorrow j ' 1 Little Liquor Stock Left When the saloon proprietors and their employees today began to make an Inventory of the goods they had left on hand preparatory to shipplnglt out of the state within the ten days prescribed by law most of them surprise had taken place at the shrinkage thatexpressed by reasqn of the vigorous business of the last few days' Bartenders and porters thrown out of employment 'do not seem to be worrythe situation Some will ing over at 'the old stands to serve near beer' buttermilk and other soft drinks or preside over the billiard hall deto take partment Many are planning trips they had ' in mind for months or to Investigate the possibilities of taking up government land to become farmers Among those who are pessimistic about the' arrival of the drouth are a few business men In street They are of the opinion that hundreds of railroad laborers ‘on the Union Pacific who dropped Into Ogden after payday will make Evanston Wyo their headquarters In the future Other business nien In the same district believe their businesses will be stimulated because laborers with pay checks In their pockets will buy necessities with their money instead of lavishing it in saloons- With the dry law In effect a common topic of conversation here- has had to do with the question of bootlegging— will there be much of this activity and when will these law violators begin their activity? This brings up the question as to what will be the source of supply- and the answer Is usually to the effect that the supply city will be Evanston XVyo If this Is true police officers and sheriffs deputies believe the Illegitimate business men will have rough for the reason that there Is sledding only one passable road to Evanston from Ogden and this road may be watched closely Before bootleggers could reach Ogden with a supply they must pass the Morgan county authorities Weber county officials placed at the mouth of Weber canyon could give a still closer scrutiny to mysterious cargoes ' - formeF'-com-panic- HBlffillSi® - Salt Lake County' Board No J Summons 200 to c Appear V L- - - : -- - -- ’ ' - ON CANYON ROAD V jt 1 : - : to-mak- fHsrald-Repabllc- 8 pedal aa - Garfield Aug L— The local draft exemption board for ’"Salt Lake county 'Will' examine the first district No third of the 600 men in the Initial draft class- In the district beginning Friday morning at i a: m The board will' adjourn-Itsittings over Sunday and will continue examinations - the following two days when” the second 200 men will be examined The final group will appear ' before the committee Tuesday Wednesday the board ' will go to Bingham where the men drafted there will be examined-ithe two days al lotted to that camp f C W Aldrich of Garfield Is chair man of the board The other members are' Seth Plxton and Dr'D £ Barnard of Garfield appointed to' take the place of 'Dr' John' R Llewellyn- of Magna who was forced to retire because he ’ - - s ' - remain - : - : - was within the registration age limit s - ’ e ne ‘ ’ : ’ 4 - s - i " CilMHNEON: - - : -- - -- - ' : - - - - - - - - - ‘ ' - - PIONEER LAID AT REST FORK IN SPANISH '' - lower-Twenty-fift- h Special Herald-Republica- n - - - by-th- e - NEW SUGAR FACTORY TO OPERATE THIS YEAR Special! Herald-Republica- n ‘ ' Cornish Aug 1 —The sugar plant Is under construction here by the West Cache Sugar company is already and it Is expected partially roofed at that with the force of 225 men now be work the main plant building will two weeks The completely covered In machinery will be installed within a the factory short time afterward and run RESIGNATION ACCEPTED Rains The city commission on recommenda- will be ready for the fall the have two weeks helped the of past tion of Chief of Police J Parley White deal and the farmhas accepted the resignation of J M beet crop a great The Anderson a member of the police force ers expect an excellent crop 4000 has contracted for about It Is understood (hat InMr Anderson left plant Vv other business acres the force to engage - that : - - - - ’ 1 ’ - 1 - - - - - - Impressive Spanish Fork Aug funeral services were held yesterday afternoon-Ithe Third ward meeting house for Lorenzo Taylor pioneer tailor of Utah county who died at his home Sunday Bishop Ralph 'Morgan was in charge The speakers were Booth State John R Davis Charles-Senator Henry Gardner and John T Spencer Closing remarks and a biographical sketch were made by Bishop Morgan Music was furnished ward choir Miss Bessie Gardner and Edward Williams Interment was In the City cemetery - I objects to: errr - - $285-0000- - 00 - Yr : r-- - '' - - be-enoug- h - - - - w - - ! - P Seo-reta- - ry - ' d A ' n ’ er - - - - i) sale of the National 'Woolgrowers association'' which takes place In Salt Lake from August 26 to 31 special railroad rates been arranged by all roads west having of Chicago and In western Canada 8 W McClure secreestimates that tary of the association the disposition of rams during the four days of the sale will result In an exchange of more than $250000 ' In addition to 4500 rams and ewes which will be s61d at public auction it Is said that' special displays of blooded sheep- give of being the most attractive promise ever ' to have appeared at' any ram sale In the United States The sale will be known astthe greatest in the history of the sheep business In the west Interest which will Typical be manifest In the' ram saie a telegram which Secretary McClure received yesterday from F W ’ Harding noted who Wis sheepman of Waukesha makes known his arrival at Littleton Mass with 120 head of Lincolns Cots wolds and Hampshlres which he has Just Imported from the British isles with the’ expresg purpose of entering them in the Salt Lake ram sale 1 The flock of rams has been so labeled at the Massachusetts station and It Is said that Salt Lake will receive great- commercial advertising as the sheep center of America while rams and ewes ’are being assembled for shipment to Salt Lake Special 'rates to the ram sale from every point in western United States and western- Canada will' be of one and y of' a fare for a round trip to Salt Lake The dates of the special rates are from August 20 to September V Success of the first ram sale which took place In Salt Lake one year ago Is reported to have developed great interest in yam sales with the result that virtually every man in the west Interested in the sheep raising business will visit Salt Lake thla year - - - - of-th- e - - - ? - -- - -- - - ’ - one-thi- one-wa- rd -- - THREE HEATING UNITS ARE NOW COMPLETE That several hundred thousand dollars will be spent by the Utah Power Ic Light company In cong struction of the hugecompleting plant now being built here was the announcement made by officials yesterday This will mean the emplojrment of several hundred men It Is said Three heating units are now complete and larger mains will soon be laid to downtown office buildings which are supplied with heat The project under way Is expected to be the beginning of a general distribution of steam heat through the business district by 'the company although at present the company will be unable to add new customers because of the' difficulty In securing construction material - steam-heatin- to-b- e - r - h Hmld-Republlca- THREAT OF GREEN City Attorney Investigating Public Auction of Sheep Here in August Largest Traction Firm’s Right to Ever Known Increase Fares v Union Secretary Demands Return of Deported Men Tntenee interest is reported 'to be deHas the Utah Light & Traction comto Gallop pany the right to raise its fare rate veloping In the second annual ram a ’ - ! JACK LAIT WRITER VISITS SALT LAKE " Indianapolis Aug re- lw—Following ceipt of word today that about eighty members of the United Mine Workers of America had been deported from a tent colony at Gallup N M William Green secretary of the organisation tele- graphed President Wilson demanding that the federal government Intervene and return the men saying in his mesV sage: Unless this Is done quickly I will favor strike of coal miners of the United States until this outrage Is righted" Mr Green stated when he made his telegram public that the men reported to him as deported were not Industrial Workers of the World but were members In good standing of the United Mine Workers of America - - ' Will Not Return to Gallup' ' Belen N’MAug L— The guard Plsced over the thirty-fomen whom the council of defense of McKinley county deported was raised tonight and-thmen were told that were free to go 7 Their departure they will probably begin tomorrow the majority going to Trinidad Colo - ur Strike Begun at Gallopb Gallup N XL Aug l —Miners employed at the Gallup Southwestern Coal company and the Diamond Coal com-- ’ pany mines here quit work this morn- lng Union officials yesterday assured the county defense council that no strike would be called in any of the Gallup mines today 'It had been reported to the council that men of all shifts ’here would be ordered to quit-wor- The state council of defense hss Is sued a pamphlet recounting the work accomplished since its organization' The committee on finance paid out $$0965 for use of ' the seed tee and has reeelved back on commitacthis count $14228 provided-fundfor-thpurchase of badges used for ' young men signing cards on day arranted ' through theRegistration seed committee for financing the Moslda and carried on a campaign for project the floating Liberty loan resulting In subscriptions of $9500000 Tbe achievements other committees are also recited ’ of DEATH GALLS NOTED ACTOR New York Aug L—Jere J Cohan who for years was one of the best known actors on the American stage and one of the famous "Four Cohans" died today of arterio sclerosis at his country home Monroe New York after an Illness of nearly two years Mr Cohan was 69 years old His wife Helen F Cohan and his son George M Cohan were with him when he died FORMER N E A HEAD DIES Mirianna Ark Aug L— T A Fut-ra- ll pioneer educator of Arkansas and Tennessee and an of the National Education association died -- s e it Jack Lalth magazine writer and newspaper man is a visitor 'In Salt Lake He arrived yesterday attending the noon organ recital at the Salt Lake here yesterday Tabernacle and then visited Saltalr He will leave late today for the Pacific coast returning In ten days by way of Lund Utah from which point he will visit Little Zion canyon While here Mr Lalt is the guest of D 8 Spencer : general passenger agent of the Oregon Short Line ex-presid- ent mm Safe Infants Invalids ' mMncc&’s MINISTER HELD FOR ' PREACHING TREASON Cedar Rapids Ia L—The Rev Aug John Relchart pastor of ths German Evangelical church ft Lowden la was held to the federal grand Jury In $5000 bond at last He Is night charged - with preaching treasonable sermons from his pulpit He gave bond THE OmaiHAL MALTED MILK Rich milk malted grain in powder form rornuanra invalids ul growing children Fire nutridoaupbuilding Ac whole Ibody Invigorates nursing mothera sal the aged Mora nutritious than tea coffee etc Instantly prepared- Requires no cooking ! - Substitutes Cost T0U Suae Prist Herald-Republica- n ' - f s i “' J r BOX ELDER TROOP TO ? BE GIVEN' RECEPTION - 'j Herald-Repnbllc- Special an Brigham City Aug ' 1 —Members of the Box Elder troop will be given a final farewell reception by the people of Brigham City tomorrow evening The reception this time- Is being handled by the bishops of the four wards and & big celebration is being planned - ! ‘ - '' Why not eat more bread —and lessof heavy 'foods— thus con serving both health and income f There would be less complaining of indigestion and tbe high cost of living everybody 'would eat more ' 77-bread— je - w yi- - s I - '1 " - - BEAUTIFUL YOUNG' WOMEN ASK JOBS AS SCHOOL TEACHERS Special Ogden Aug - - The broad that made mother stop halting ' £ “ - r Begin at once to increase the amount' of bread you eat v sure of getting good bread the year But be uniform Bread is every day in Royal - ' vau-- ROYAL BAKING: COMPANY: Salt Lake f - 1 — Ogden 'will have ' a bevy of beautiful young women for school teachers If the cityboard of education elects a' numher of applicants who wantto corns from their eastern homes Many submit photographs with their requests and the standard ofbeauty Is' high — unless the photographers flatter The teaching staff r'for the schools is virtually arranged for a few positions liut:there to be filledmaybe by reason of last hour ' - - -- - ’ 'a ' ' V ' rarily STRIKERS REACH SALT LAKE FROM MINE Sixty miners who struck at the mine of the Marysvale In Mineral Products Salt Lake yestercompany arrived district The the from Marysvale day men according to one of the miners are demanding better working and bunking conditions an increase in pay of 50 cents a day and the removal of certain timekeeper ' t - BINGHAM TEMPERANCE SOrTFTV CELEBRATES Aug 1 HEW IflOimiARY AND RESIDENCE of —The members of Bingham the Swedish Temperance society of this tonight in honor of city entertained the passing of John Barleycorn The in the Temperance festivities were heldwhich was crowded hall in Carr Fork200 A and more than merrymakers heavy with lumpy to follow most program was given followed by a feeling that seems you eat everything You- will find that provided you take dance and a litnqutt a little bisurated magnesia Immediate' RED LIGHT DISTRICT CLOSED: ly after a meal you can eat almost red light-disIt without any anythingof and enjoy Bingham Aug 1—The folto discomfort or has again been offidanger pain trict of Bingham the county low and moreover the continued use and city closed by n of the bisurated magnesia cannot In- cially The occurred authorities so the stomach In any way jure long the of John with passing as there are any symptoms of acid last night ' Barleycorn Embalmer - - - ? ‘ resignation-'- ' a HenM-RepubHca- n r vents Food Fermentatioiv Sour Gassy Stomach and Add Indigestion V Doubtless If you are a sufferer from Indigestion you have already tried pepsin bismuth soda charcoal drugs and various digestive aids and you know these trou-bl- fr will not cure — inthings some cases do not your even give relief Bub- before giving up bop and deciding you areof--& chronic dyspeptic Just the effect little bisurated magtry nesia— not the ordinary commercial carbonate citrate oxide or milk but the bisurated magnesia which you can pure obtain from practically any drugIn either powdered or tablet form gist Take a teaspoonful of the powder or two compressed tablets with a little water after your next ' meal and see this-- makes what It will neutralize the dangerous instantly acid in the stomach which now harmful causes your food to ferment and sour wind flatulence heartgas making burn the bloated or -- shut-dow- ' '7 1 g0UthSt Where we are modernly equipped and can furnish funerals from the lowest priced to the moat exacting and price will be made ixcordint the buyer to the desires of enables ua to' materially reduce 'the coat of funerals Our new place notwithstanding the increased cost of All materials FU “ M k DEFENSE COUNCIL PUBLISHES REPORT - - A-- ' PLAN QUESTIONED YEARLY RAT1 SALE OF COAL MINERS under Its franchise from the Salt Lake City? ' - The traction company - has appealed to the public utility commission that it may be allowed to raise or at least discontinue the use of its 4 cent car books end charge 1 cent for each trans' fer Issued At the present time the company is under a combination of franoperating chises some of which were granted to the old Rapid Transit company and some to the old Consolidated Street Railway company TVilllam H Folland "assistant city attorney is "digging into all of the various franchises granted together with the franchise granted the present company 7 Mr Folland yesterday Informed jCarl A' Sche!d commissioner of public af- fairs and finance that It would be adr I vlsable for the city to appear before-th'public utility commlssiqn and inprotest rates against the proposed Increase Commissioner Scheid will bring the matter before the commission this' V' morning the traction The iVpVr-- -' Is petition Readied by for permlssloxF to ' abandon Itscompany 4rcent Herman Hill wealthy realty holder Compromise for booki' of sale fare the died yesterday morning at ‘a local hosby trip fifty Railroad and Emigration for a 82 of l'cent and 71 charge of Mr Hill at the age pital years before the pubbe Elms-horwill heard transfers was born In L&gelangehoheV Owners ' Property lic utilities ' commission August 15 at Germany February - 17 1846 10 a m a After a short time spent in California came to he Lake Salt placer mining Protests of the Emigration canyon City and settled here in 1872 In ad- property owners have been withdrawn BAim -dition to real estate holdings here he was also Interested In the Consolidated and dismantling 'of the line will comWagon & Machine company and in the mence Immediately' Utah-Idah- o Sugar company This was the announcement made Mr ? Hill was prominent An the MaWING REPORT SHOWS by CL D- - Harding who has sonic order being a member of the yesterday devoted much effort the past during Wasatch lodge Utah chapter F and three' months to Inducing various InA M and of the Utah comiqandery terests to compromise their differences No 1 Knights Templar The dismantling will be done by the In Its August trade and finance letHe is survived by his second wife railroad ' ‘itself ter the Utah State National bank calls instead of by contract Herman and will take about Mary Fielltz a nephew accordattention that the bank clearings in six weeks Harms state chemist & niece Mrs M ing to the estimate of Le Grand to 178 cities during June amounted Young IGardner formerly of Salt Lake and $26 with as Withdrawal of the comparedoccurred $27000000000 protests' now of Seattle and a brother and sis- after a special meeting of - the board 000000000 during - May and $21 ter living in Germany of directors of the Emigration Canyon 000000000 during the corresponding Funeral services will bs held Satur- Improvement association yesterday In month of one year ago m at the Masonic temple the office of W day at 2‘p NThe review of conditions In general president under the auspices of the Knights of - the association ' Williams As inducement for shows less business failures In June Templar Interment will bs In Mount withholding Its opposition the aSsocl than in May and that business condl Olivet cemetery ation will get property south of the tions In general' give evidence of im reservation between'- Thirteenth and provement' The financing of corpora Twenty-fir- st June amounted to $6$ 'East' streets- the roadbed tions and telephone wires’ to 'Plnecrest Inn 000000during’ as compared with $53000000 In electric light wires as far as tbs May BUYING $12i5000 LOT and transformer house further that dividend It Is estimated ' disbursements be will a Efforts during made have to Interest and a In second complaint to the city boulevard Into the canyon built as soon July will total $818000000 as compared commission Julius M Miller objects to as and possible with $166000000 in June the' city paying $125000 'for rthe propone ownto ago not of I believe year that property during July erty known as Kendall's square lowill have anything to regret when cated between Fourth and Fifth South ers Is ready said Mr Hardand West Temple and First West the boulevard When that Is available automo- SWISS CELEBRATE ing streets- for a municipal market Mr Miller says the county 'assessor bile service will unquestionably be InNATIONAL FREEDOM stalled I know of at least two men has placed a valuation on the property who serare to start such a prepared at' $69875 and on the improvements at vice and carry Members of the local Swiss colony as cheaply as passengers 1917 $2000 for the ' in Unity hall last night the celebrated railroad carried them! He declares that It Is understood theThe of Switserland's 626th cf this at the railroad anniversary scrapping that the assessor Is putting full valua- time when John Zoss Swiss Austria freedom from materials tion on all property Mr Miller says are at a all construction was the prinUtah for war consular because of the agent premium that 5 per cent above the assessed val- will make It is believed to cipal speaker was enlivened uation’ would posslblelt by two The program dispose of the rails rolling stock and "Switzerand Tell" "William tableaux at other figproperty higher Musical numbers ure than ordinarily would be possible land and- America" WANTS- - CONTRACT TO and were given Prof - G H Schuster hisSwiss from Extracts Charles Pike KILL CITY RODENTS INCH IS 69 INCHES tory were recited by John Glauser IN HEIGHT SO Ridding the city of rats by means of inoculation Is the method suggested COUNTRY EDITTORS TO to Mayor W Mont Ferry by CL- L RobU S HIM TAKES erts 1886 Fifth VISIT ZION CANYON He has a East street r preparation he says which will kill : " What’s In a name? off the' rodents without endangering Members of the Utah State Press asThis Is the question officers In ’ human life He Is ready to take a consociation ihe comprising editors of counlocal marine corps ' charge of tract to rid the city of the pests try newspapers will visit Zion canyon recruiting station wish to- have anon their annual outing August 25 Ar" swered rangements are now being made by Inch of Yesterday Rtehard-'ROBERT R GOODMAN President L E Diehl of Mammoth Salt Lake applied for enlistment R T1 Porter of Salt Lake and in the marines' At first he ln-- Y LEAVES U ROAD qulred: Charles S Wilkinson of Cedar City relative to enlistment over The "Wylie Way” Is preparing to the’ sergeant In the telephone-an' Special care of the party A special train charge understood him to say that take be run from this city to Lund over will his hslgnt was one Inch Ogden Aug 1 — Robert R Goodman Bee-mto “You can’t enlist"' was the who has been assistant the Salt Lake Route Paul M ' prompt "Go ticket of out and and passenger agent reply city pitch the Union Pacific system left the railand grow a Jit"' hay CITY COURT PRESENTS soon the man In question way service today to take a position as Pretty teller in the Plngree National bank of appeared in person at the station WITH WATCH CLERK and straightened out the belief the Ogden a 1 officers had Frank B Hammond clerk of the city And he was enlisted — heiqht five polloe court received a handsome ofFIRSTARREST UNDER nine Inches And his feetand ficers’ regulation wrist watch in a ' name was Inch opening' of NEW PROHIBITION LAW gold case shortly before the morning session of court yesterday ' The watch was a gift of the members Special the court and was presented by of MAGNESIA — TRY FOR Ogden Augl 1 The f Irat complaint John F Tobin' member-oJudge drawn In 'Weber'' county under the Dr H is a Mr Hammond law-waIssued tonight by prohibition which ambulance B corps Sprague’s the county attorney and charges David and service called for expects been has 11 Andrews of Logan with being drunk to leave for training camp within a few and disposing of liquor to Smith days Spencer Collins deputy clerk and William Frank' also of Logan will assume Hammond’s duties tempoThey were arrested in a rooming house It Neutralizes Stomach Acidity Pre: gdtn ‘ Herald-Republle- Ogden DOMESTIC tangle In which STREET CAR RATE: WIDE INTEREST IN GENERAL STRIKE husband was marrlsd to two wives at the same time and a wife was was wedded to two husbands ' L out J Judge by straightened Brown yesterday when the court annulled the marital bonds be- -' tween James D Buck and Nellis June Spencer The two were married April' s' 1918 the man told the court and' at that time he said he understood his wife had been divorced from a ' former husband Later according to his explanation he learned that she had'not been dl vorce'd Believing1 that their marriage was not ‘binding he was wedded' ' M last February to Miss Ethel dsModill at Ogden He finally elded to go Into court in order that there might be no question as to his wedlock status Monday Fy County Draft v Board ' tion of the prohibition law Inquiry was made when Sergt F Kelllher and Defective W I JMoore arrived at police headquarters with four or five men anda suit case which seemed to have contents George' Carey desk sergeant - referred Inquirers to Sergeant Kelllher- but when a question was put to ' the police sergeant who was conversing with' fhe chief the ' chief ordered the news gatherers out of his office declaring they had no busl-- : - Afterward he declared that he was not ready to give out inf regarding the arrest:1' A First 40 Will Be Examined - - : : - J Ogden Aug 1—Two newspaper men were ordered from the private' office of Thomas E Browning chief of police- this afternoon when they inquired as to whether arrests had been made for viola- ESTABLISHMENTS 4 -- Special Hmld-Kepabllca- a WEBER SUMMONS Court Unravels Tangle of Much 120 REGISTRANTS 3S ' R A3L S : ' s - b JpjsloOorevenTesTnnJhcHruimlshcjJjtnthosejeslringjnienijJ ' |