Show "? i i ' T ' A - t- C ' “V : Y THE r ARMSTRONG IS V' Vjl- ' 1 - 4 SLAVERS UniqueMonors Goto 'Bishop's S'? SNARED SBtER i vr - - INVOKES ATT) OF ATT ISllAND MOVIE HOUSES - t!® I 4 A V:‘ 1 - As Governess When She iPPPed ' k s - t t Hales of Spanish Fork and he has ' f five distinctions to his credit His unique record Is based oa " these circumstances: ' was His the first Utah name drawn' In the lottery at Washing- - t : ton D'G'- r He was the first registrant palled v: In Utah county j v' He was the first man examined a perfect physical examlna- passing tionHe was the first to 'waive exemp- - tlon-- 's And he was the first recruit' ae-- f credited to the citizen's army from r Spanish Fork Hales who Is 23 years of age Is’ the son of Bishop George Hales and- ' grandson of William Jex the patriarch He was born and educated ln Spanish Fork being a member ? of the high school basketball team that fought Its way to first place in the state championship V of t Only once was that serifs dlst no firsts broken— and then credit' attached to the performance' Hales basketball team Journeyed to and wonseo- Chicago world’s ond place ln the champion-- :: ' l-' games j ship Armstrong former Salt Zj5£VilUtl1 “f110®1 teacher who ln IIavana-- - mysteriously Cuba two Arm-latro- ns : ' Discussion off details for the: big drive of the second Liberty loan and the appointment of heads of numerous committees that will have charge of the coming campaign were matters ef business that concerned the Liberty loan publicity committee at a luncheon yesterday afternoon at the Commercial club ' Following are the and their respective offices: appointees A N McKay chalrmarn state 'publicity committee W R Putnam secretary M McAllister display newspaper' advertising L & Glllham special newspaper features Georger- Carpenter ' motion picture houses Ross Beeson utilities and automobiles H & public Anderson billboard and poster publicity DeWltt Khox bank publicity Frank Newman features and stunts Joins 8 Crltch-lo- w speakers- - committee Rev William W Fleetwood church publicity Walter CL Lewis department store and window display T L Holman dlstrl-buti- ! " - ’ - on 7 ’ - - s ' - j BE VISITED BY a- s JAP STATESMEN ’ - - 4 4‘i f ' ' - : - - - - ’ - r to-th- - - ' - - - - DENIES COMPEimON WITH PAID WORKERS - 4 ' Declares Rail Officials Gould Not Obtain Enough 'Men to Do Job : Executive’ Pnblleity Commlttesw Each of j the foregoing 'men will act as chairman of his committee the members of which he will : have the power to ‘appoint "and chairmen of the several committees will constitute the executive publicity committee of the state Governor - Bamberger announced1 the appointmentyesterday of Fred Kle-s- el and W H Wattls both of Ogden and a W Whitley of Salt Lake to the state executive committee of the loan Liberty Mrs A W McCune 'was also to membership oh the' state executive committee Mrs “ William G by McAdoo" president the National Woman's Liberty loanof'committee’ j L Is Euthuslustie Bamberger ' Clarence Bamberger chairman'' of the Liberty loan committee of Utah is enthusiastic over the chairmanship personnel of the various committees He Is confident' that: it- will now- be possible to get a response to the second Liberty loan appeal that ‘will be even greater than Utah's rally to the f ' : - - - - - ( - ! appointed - ( ’ - - first call f - - t i Governor Bamberger took Issue yesterday with representatives of ' labor who have opposed using eonvlets of the state prison road camps to repair the Schofield branch of the Denver A Rio Grande railroad following the collapse of the Mammoth dam “The convicts rebuilt the roadway for the welfare of the public and to enable the hauling of coal from the Carbon county mines to Salt Lake rather than for the accommodation of the railroad the governor said company" - "Had It not been for the month of Inactivity ln the ' hauling of coal on the Denver A Rio ‘Grande lines an abundance of fuel for the coming winter would have been assured" the governor said "As it Is the railroads and the producers are working hard together to satisfy the demands of the com mission wltgyA fair chance despite the break in operations of matching the supply with the needs of the consumer" Speaking of the complaints that have been voiced relative to the state’s extension of aid to the D A R Gw at the time the Mammoth fdara disaster Governor Bamberger said: "I am not thinking anything about the complaints some people are makwhat the state ing because I know did was Justified by thpt the circumstances It Is charged that we displaced skilled labor with the work of convicts besides furnishing convicts ln competition with free labor' The charges are false— they're nonsense The railroad couldn’t get labor for the big repair Job- - The road' tried every place but there was none to be had to ne The board of' examiners considered It- perfectly right to help out because the convict gang was camped by the washed-otracks and because the longer the road remained out of operation' the more the people of the state were bound t to suffer of fuel "I do not think there will be any coal shortage - ln Salt Lake this winter The railroads the producers and the public utilities commission are all to assure plenty working harmoniously of fuel and more coal la being hauled from the mines now than ever before Is admittedly Impossible for the It mines to work constantly at full capacity for labor shortage is a stubborn fact that cannot be denied but I feel certain there will be no suffering - - County councils of defense have been assigned the ' task of conducting the Liberty loan campaign in the respective counties An appeal sent to them in a ‘circular by the general commitat tee urges scope of the unthat the state will be called dertakingassume upon to It reads In “The state of 'Utah will bepart: called upon to raise an enormous sum larger ln fact' than ever before attempted and It can only be done through timely and q(ff iclent organization and - strenuous and aggressive work on the part of all those upon whom this tremendous task : falls "At 'this time when our nation Is at war ho: man can consistently refuse to serve his country ln assisting to raise money : for the ' government It for lack of fuel this year as there was Is a call of the nation and as good last There Is more coal stored ln the citizens of Utah we must heed the II homes off Salt Lakers now thsa ever calL" before at this time of year"' - ut ‘ the-gre- for-wan- : - - - : ' sloners tomorrow by Commissioner Charles !f Stillman who is j in charge of the highways- - and bridges of the ! county-‘ The decision' of Mr Stillman was reached 'yesterday following a visit to the place In company with' R’ XL I Collier county surveyor This piece of road has been in dispute' between the county and the railroad company ‘ since last' spring According to teamsters who were questioned they feel that the ' company is to force them out of businesstrying i Mr Stillman said yesterday that officers of the company had made re peated promises that they would fix the road Many years ago- the - disputed of was used for a railstrip was stated to Mr Stillman road It ground yesterday that the road was abandoned twelve or fifteen years ago and that eleven years ago the rails were taken up for a distance of about 600 yards and that the roadbed waa then used for a highway and that the county has kept it ln repairs for the last eleven - - - years According 'to the information received ty the county commissioners the company now claims that the roadbed was never abandoned and that It still belongs to the ' company - Mr Stillman said yesterday that if the attitude of the county attorney was still the same as the last time an opinion was rendered he would ask the other members of the commission for authority to employ special counsel be that the rights of the county ' ' might - protected' LIQUOR COMPLAINTS ACCUSE SEVEN MEN In complaints Issued by' the county attorney yesterday seven men are charged with offenses said to have grown out of the illicit possession of : liquor H H Jorgenson former special agent for the county was arrested by Deputy Sheriff W XL Schoppe charged with receiving a bribe ' Dave Williams John Stamls Bill Williams T CL Williams Pete Fotos and George Pagonls are charged In a complaint with threatening to kill Jorgenson and with giving a bribe Jorgenson Told the deputy sheriff that the six men threatened to kill him unless he signed an affidavit that he knew nothing : to convlet them under the prohibition laws He says:- that when he signed the affidavit they gave him $60 put him on a - train and back under warned him never to ccme the penalty of death - - - -- - '- - - - - - : - ’ ' - It: i ' - 4 7 - - - ? i TROOP Governor and Mayor to Boards Take Holiday Work Not Pressing Since Speak Vocalists Will Give Selectigns f Utah Quota Left Equipment Lacking but Men Win Encomiums of : Draft boards ln Salt Lake Including The committee in charge of the camU S Army Officers the district appeal board ln the Federal paign to" raise a mess fund of $10000 INSPECTED ' - 3 building declared a holiday yesterday and all work was postponed until Monday The work now before the boards Is not pressing Inasmuch as the first departed for the quota' of' men :has camp at American Lake training Wash and: the second quota vrlll not be called until September 19 i A total of 216 men are yet to be certified for service before the Salt Lake quota of 1800 men is complete This about work It is expected will require r1 ' - one week v - " - men from ontslde points in the state passed through Salt Lake yesterday en route to American Lake where they win join the Salt Lake - wjio left men quota ' of twenty-on- e ' Wednesday One hundred and ninety-on- e men In district No 1 Salt Lake county which Includes Bingham and Garfield failed to appear for physical examination beMost of this fore the draft boards number are foreigners and unless they appear before the board before Thursof day they will be arrested on charges ' evading the draft Twenty-fou- r ’ - - - L CHILD’S FUNERAL TODAY Funeral - services for' ' Betty Pljce daughter of Mr and Mrs Charles 'R Pike who died last Tuesday wlllbe held at the home 168 T street at 2 p m today - three-year-o- ld Open from " 8 to 6 Every Day Except v Saturday— Close at it ‘ !’i Saturday It’s Really a Pleasure to Shop at the’ I -- f s r ' J : Only Rival se v vV' "V 4 surance' ' per cent perfect 44 Eutcn : j '' A ’ r ' V 4 - ' 'sv s - - S I ' : ' - - - ’ v - - Kearns Bids - W Service Main 500 - I - ' “ - ‘ - ‘ - - V- - - address Governor Bamberger vocal selection Emnia Lucy Gates violin selection' Willard Welhe response Colonel Young selections by Tabernacle choir selection Utah light arinstrumental tillery ' band under direction of Prof CL J Hawkins ' Mr Dlnlnny was born ln Addison N Y June 7 1S51 the son of J W Dlnlnny He was graduated Y-from Union college at Albany N - ln 1878 and ln the same year married Sarah O Ambler of Bedford N Y He waa admitted to the bar aoon afterward and entered hla father’s law office In 1891 Mr Dlnlnny cams to Utah and took up the practice He became prominent In politics serving two terms- aa Demo- cranio state chairman He waa a member of the fire and police board for several years and served aa city' attorney ' for eleven years To this position he was twice elected and when the city came under the rule: of commission government he waa retained ln the law department Death was directly due to pneumonia although Mr ' Dlnlnny had been 111 for five months from heart He Is disease and complications survived by his widow and one daughter Mrs M H Sowles - of-la- Funeral arrangements are ing pend- -' FOOD EXHIBITS GOING TO FAIR - ' I - - ’ ka - - - Women Will Withdraw Displays From Rio Grande and Light Companies - With an instructive exhibit the mittee of the women's branch which has city council of defense given attention to food conservation will withdraw exhibits now displayed Rio Grande and the at the Denver-Utah Power & Light company offices The work of conservation will not be concluded however for a program of lectures and other means of imthe need of kitchen econopressing mies la now being arranged ' ' MIfi Blanche Cooper food expert will con tlnue as supervisor of activities throughout this month The executive committee whose exhibits have been viewed by thousands of persona consists of Mrs CL IL McUSING Mahon Mrs George M Bacon and Mrs ACCUSED OF Jeannette Hyde Mrs W F Adams PARSON’S AUTOMOBILE has had charge of the cannery which has' been one of the M K Parson when he returned most novel agencies for furthering from1 a fishing yesterday caused trip conservation the arrest of Howard Hark and Otto Johnson whom he accuses of using his automobile while he was absent ParSTATE STREET WILL sons said the two men during his ab: BE CLEAR TUESDAY sence phoned the garage almost dally using his name and directing that the be left at certain places car car rails on When Relaying of the street the they were through withBradState etreet will be feomiileted today auto he says the they left It atresides The ballasting and surfacing of the ford apartments and he second track will be' finished by Mon- phoned the garagewhere come to and It get day night according to IL- F Dicke On' returning he noticed the machine comTraction manager Utah Light-had been used and that hls gas bills pany The State street road will be were Increased Inquiries resulted ln opened to traffic Tuesday morning If notifying the garage to call the shernothing happens to upset present plans iffs office when the next phone call This stretch of track extends from came South Seventeenth to Twenty-fir- st the accused men were arrested streets on State and It has been torn It When admitted using the masaid is up to auto and wagon traffic fof the chine Mrthey told them that if Parsons past six weeks It has been necessary they paid for the damage gas and oil to lower the street car tracks from 6 not prosecute Inches to 1 feet Ties have been plied he might up along the new tracks concrete mixers have littered the road and the work UTAH TO CARE FOR has been a nuisance to passing vehicles WARVICTIM’S ESTATE Street: car officials have been put to The much expense and annoyance completion of this work will leave 'The office of the attorney general State street' clear so that both sides of yesterday received a copy of letters of the street can now be used for a con- administration' In the estate of James tinuous passage ' between the : State Claude B Proctor of Umavady county capltol and Sandy at which point the of Londonderry Ireland Proctor was a captain In the Tenth battalion of the paving ceases Royal: Irish 1fusiliers and was killed in He left a $9000 action July In France TWO COTTONWOOD estate Included ' In the assets were shares of Union Pacific stock and BRIDGES FINISHED Llfty eighty shares of Denver A Rio Grande The second of the three bridges which preferred the county Is building In Little Cottonwood canyon Is practically completed! This Is the upper bridge The lower bridge' was completed 'several days ago and the middle bridge will be In place within the next two weeks The three bridges are of stone abutmentcoststeel Perhaps the of floors The girders and wood the three will be about $1060' comat the state fair the executiveplanned 'of V ' i 4 -- ' That poser in thrift whether t!s better to put all the eggs in one basket or scatter ’em about- a bit Is being pondered by the state land board which doesn’t know If it would be wiser to lend $45000 to rancher or $5000 to each of nine farmers ' Available funds to appease ' all borrowers have dwindled so that all of the Importuning ten qannot be accommodated The cattleman who desires the $45000 offers 100- 000 acres of land as security which as parcels of sod go seems to be sufficient The other nine tender their farms Although no decision was reached when the problem was renewed rea choice appeared to be forecently cast by the consideration that nine farms under the would expenditures contemplated contribute more to the food supply than would the lone ranch - - A er ' co-opera- - - - crop-produci- ng 'Treading on Firm Ground who pay byH — check who realize ' the e ' ‘ - - s People - i - ! - L " -- v J VV ’ ' - ! one-cattl- Utah Power & Light ed "Efficient Public - “ RIDER'S LEG BROKEN Joseph Koer 429 N Sixth West livery stable employe suffered a broken leg yesterday afternoon at Second West and First South streets when' the horse he was riding slipped on the pavement and felL - The fracture was treated by Dr Keyting at the emergency hospital t BOOKSTORE f9 The Mazda Lamps you 1 purchase from us1 are always new and 100 - sunwar school union F “Sunlight’s - w ' e - " ’ LAND BOARD PUZZLE which threatened to destroy Lake the entire ' property of the Balt at 40 South Transportation company West Temple street! was discovered on the second floor of the' bulld!ng about 780 o’clock last night Several firemen received minor Injuries but no one waa hurt seriously : The roof of the building and the enwere tire contents of the second story was floor The first totally destroyed and used as & garage and store-houcontained about 100 cars and a large amount of miscellaneous baggage all of which was removed uninjured The damage Is estimated at several thousand dollars and is covered by In 1 - - for the boys of the Utah light artillery and field hospital has all Its plans laid for a drive on the pocketbooks of Salt Lakers this weekThe money will be forwarded to CoL R W Young of the light artillery who will distribute it among bis captains for administration ln the improvement of the ' dally menus It Is 'planned to forward the amount ln Installments of $1000 each The week’s work will end with a grand concert in the Salt Lake Tabernacle next Saturday night at which Governor Bamberger Mayor Ferry and Colonel Young will speak and some of the best vocalists of the city will- sing The program includes: Patriotic organ sold Prof J J McClellan 'selection Orpheus club under leadership of A H Peabody vocal selection Mrs Marjorie Dodge Warner: instrumental trio Messrs Charles Shepherd Otto address King and Bert Shepherd Mayor Ferry tenor solo David Retse: $45000 LOAN TO 1 OR $5000 TO 9 IS v‘ A-fir- i Yesterday the official designation of the First Utah light field artillery became the One Hundred and Forty-fift- h (First Utah National Guard artillery United States) Brig Gen Le Roy Lyons of the Sixty-fift- h army division made an official inspection of the troops at the artillery camp yesterday and Informed them that this Is the new desig' i nation' The Inspection was thorough ’ and took up the entire morning Foot drills educational examination and noncommissioned officers and physical tests were made to determine the efficiencyv of the men A- record of the class of work formerly followed by the eoldlers was made ln order to the amount - of enduranceapproximate of the men Squads were put through running tests to find out their lung capacity After was completed General as well Lyonsexpressed ' pleased The new designation for the regiment allows them to retain the distinction of being the Utah- regiment while taking the number for the regiment from national headquarters The western department has been keeping a close watch of the equipping of the regiment and the progress they have made undergoing inoculation Equipment is still lacking ' In some classes such as side arms and rifles The regiment Is about fully equipped as to clothing It was reported last night that an order to move will come as soon as the men have fully recovered from Inoculations FIREMEN HURT IN LAST NIGHT’S FIRE ! street of pneumonia which' developed after an Illness of five months ' ! PROGRAM READY ANSWER DRAFT IS RECHRISTENED - ?- HARPER J eleven years and a prominent member of the Utah 69bar R died last night at his home - papers- I J DININNY DININNY city I - An electric lnterurban road will be built from Salt Lake to Eureka It was learned yesterday from authentic sources Official confirmation of the plan to build the road Is expected from President Orem within a few days That road will tap one of the richest tlons In Utsh- The line will be a feed- er for Salt Lake and vicinity The Orem lines will be extended from Payson and a direct road will be con-A structed from Salt Lake to Eureka train service similar to that between Salt Lake and Payson will be established According to the plans as announced unofficially work will commence : on the Salt Lake-Eureline Is expected the time within a short It construction - force employed on the Pleasant Green extension will be utilized as soon a that road has been com' pleted Boosts Onras Route Rumors that the road would be built to ' Eureka have been heard for weeka was known In Salt Lake several It weeks ago that scouts for the Orem lines had gone over three proposed routes It also was learned 'that options-had been offered' "land owners two of these routes- During last along Ross Beesen general traffic manweek ager and S D Nauman superintendent of the Orem lines haave been In Eureka Inquiring of merchants and mine owners as to the amount of business the new roads might expect Three prospective routes Into Eureka are being considered All of them run from the southern end'of the Orem line at Payson to Eureka The most mounprobable route skirts the base of the tains and enters the towns of Elberta and Goshen J The newroad will tap the rich Strawberry valley project which the government has virtually completed This will put under cultivation with what already Is being cultivated 60000 acres in the neighborhood of Pay-so-n and Spanish Fork and about 12000acres In the Goshen valley Will Coueet With fmelli The Tlntle district will bs brought Into direct rail communication with Salt Lake by the new road The famous mines of Juab county will be afforded communication' with the smelters and suburbs- Some ef factories In Salt Lake lead-silvmines the world’s greatest are located here among them being the Eagle-Bin- e Bell the great Chief Consolidated the Centennial Eureka and the Gemini The total output of the district which now Is being wofked Is about 200 carloads of ore weekly or about- 8000 tona ' In 'addition to the mines now workdistrict' and that ing the whole Tlntlemineralized north is Many lying just mines now abandoned will be put on a pai’Ing basis and made large producers with the advent of the new railroad - HARPER - - - - - UTAH ARTILLERY TROOP BENEFIT - - " - - - Abandoned Mines North f of Tintic Are Expected to Be’Regpened - - - CONSTRUCTION WORK TO COMMENCE SOON Authority- - either to compel the Little Cottonwood Canyon Transportation company to remove Its tracks or put the county road in good condition for a distance of 600 yards near Wasatch ' wflj be asked of the county commls ' : ’’ a last-sprin- ’ - - r - ML BE BUILT New Orem Line to Tap Opi of Richest Sections of Utah i v i - ’ 1 - ELECTRIC ROAD ' ' Cottonwod Canyon Little Prisoners Says Rebuilt Road for Public Transportation Company to Get Goal May Be Defendant li Will Complete Efficient y Organizations - wa abducted and aold ®lavery la the opinion ex- -i 1X2 sedhIe by her brother Burl In a letter to friends here discovered enough evidence i'''1 Have vrant he bellf that Ruth waa a teachers' a Into through k° White slavery he writes agency "When Z a few more facta there will be gather a horrible scandaL Washington and New Tork are working with me enerThe police and getically newspapers ' nave deone everything In theirVS and every picture house on the powtr Island 'bas flashed her picture on the screen" Mystery of Salt Lake Girl The salient points' of the’ Armstrong ease' which has baffled not only the Cuban authorities but the ' States secret service are these’: United - Ruth Armstrong-Ithe daughter of be Roy Armstrong former editor of 'the 'Intermauntain She Is Republican United j a sister of Paul Armstrong t (States naturalization 'agent and Burl (Armstrong a Los Angeles newspaperman who has gone to Cuba to aid ln J the search for his sister Miss Arm- Mission to Study Court Pro school- - ln Salt strong 'bake formerly taught i cedure and American At the time ‘of her disappearance she was employed as governess in a wealNewspaper Methods One nlgfct two thy- Cuban months ago family she left her ‘room and (never returned' Her 'room was ‘found tin order and nothing was taken to InSalt Lake' will be visited by another dicate that ’ she contemplated depar- foreign commission in October when ture Nor ‘had there teen anything ' ln five representatives of the- Imperial her actions to indicate a' cause reach here on for her Japanese government their way east Telegrams announced disappearanceAccording to the ’word received from the coming of the distinguished states Burl Armstrong the authorities there men are following what they believe' to be will be made up of T The a direct 'clue "’’Several days after her Masao delegation of the commission K president' disappearance an automobile was driv-:- n Mochljukl second In' rank of the party entrance of a' large build- E' Uyemane who Is to act as secretary up ing In Havana and a woman left the of the party K Mochljukl and S'Ya-man- e machine and entered the building folAll are- members of the Japlowed by a man anese parliament to M Uyeda corT Masao according Automobile ' and Struggle at Lake Salt City for the respondent became In a heated San Francisco Theyengaged Japanese-Amerl-ca- n dally a and A ensued argument struggle te a lawyer of note in Japan He - woman's scream attracted the atten- had the of being called by Siam tion of passersby and a crowd formed to revise honor of laws a few years Its code was asked If she Were The woman Ruth1 ‘Armstrong- but denied It' She ago and was : made a countIs by the became greatly perturbed however Siamese government Masao a gradwhen told that the disappearance of uate of the University of Michigan and one of the best lawyers Ruth Armstrong had been attracting Is considered mission here will be to His of Japan In Havana A attention widespread moment later the man and woman ap- observe court proceedure and to Invesmethods of trial by juries ln all parently overcoming their differences tigate ln hisv is not practiced entered the automobile and drove courts which " country away All trace of them was lost Is a newspaper man According to latest advices received HeK IsMochljukl one of' the largest of editor from Burl Armstrong he Is now ln the He was educated in Interior provinces of Cuba Not a clue Tokyo papers mishe says has teen Ignored nor a stone England-a- t 'Oxford- His special American Into to Is look sion here left unturned in the search for the of conducting dailies especialmissing glrL The family has offered methods to the system employed ln a reward of $500 f or inf ormatlon lead- - ly in regard news on the larger local' ! v r to her handling Ing discoveryJapanese - " papers haveon previously FOOD OFFICIALS TO ‘ " placed their edigreater emphasis t the with department-bucoming MEET AT SALT LAKE torial r Into prominence a- large number of - e - t younger men who have been educated Walter M Boyden state'vh'food and abroad' there comes a demand for mod-er-' n Z news getting commissioner received ' a letter "dairy' from B- - R Hart chief of the western E" Uyemane Is a business man He district of the national bureau of chem- was educated ln London and spent ten istry yesterday suggesting that state years In America - He1 Is considered (food and drug officials of the 'western the representalve of the people and is states hold a convention In Salt Lake the strongest democratic Idealist that Oct 22 Mr Boyden replied approving Japan has the suggestion Governor S Yamane Is a doctor' and comes wrote to Mr Hart Inviting'Bamberger the state hither to find what- America has ' new food and drug officials to Salt Lake and lii the way of medicine and surgical offering the use of the House chamber appliances' He will examine closely ait the capltol for their sessions ' the municipal overseeing of the public health which matter Is now being ln Japan’ agitated JUDGE GARY’S PARTY: XL Jennings Uyehara is the William of Japan being a rabid prohiIS DUE HERE TODAY Bryan bitionist - He Introduced a law in the the last during parliament 'Judge Elbert H Gary head of the Japanese one to vote was and the session only United States Steel corporation will for He Is popular with his people arrive In Salt Lake at 210 p ra today being brilliant orator He doubtless a San Francisco He will probably will examine (from Lake thoroughly confer with Union Pacific and Oregon with respect toSalt how much prohibition officials Line (Short business ‘conditions here has Accompanying Judge Gary will be and Improved of the party lies ' as the Itinerary Mrs Gary and a small party of friends cities of ' the many through They will remain at the Hotel Utah to- where prohibition now islarger tried being day and will be the guests tomorrow of will fortify himself ' with a Robert C Gemmell general manager of Yamane of facts and figures to reopen to ToUme the Utah Copper company on a visit his fight for the salvation of his na’ Bingham tive' land when he returns They will leave Monday afternoon The party of statesmen will remain ln Salt Lake City two days They will WILL INSPECT UTAH ROADS' ' In America' about two months being - XL' CL Merrill chief engineer 'of the be at the expense of parliament sent United States forest service and Capt They here will guided on their route by P 'St ’John Wllscn1 chief engineer of K Kanjakibe secretary of the the federal office of public roads will Japanese associations of America joint He are over route ahead Inspect road projects in Utah that' the will go personally receiving federal 'aid this week ' of the party being expected in Salt Lake in two weeks On his advance will map routes learn the centrip he delters of the Information which the’ data such and seeks gather egation as will gain speed for the party whose to parliament durobject Is to report sessionDecember ing the s - : - TO BE DEMAND UPHELD Committees- Just Appointed Governor j J He Is Howard position City Attorney Harper Dininny 1 : -- — D&RG FOR HUGE SOT 1 first ln athletic contests JOEING become-a-habiso i fixed with this young ?nan that ln the keener competition’ of the citizen's army he simply couldn't forego-tha- - From Sigh- t- ”fc m??fared tv i - UtahTeacher Was Employed - ’’ t jr ) t Newspaperman D e c 1 a rejB Horrible Scandal ’Will Soon Be Bared v £9 TRAGC RET10VAL LABOR TO ASSIST DEM'JDS ARE r ' 'x v Death Summons S L TO EUREKA GOOD ROAD OR USEOF CONVICT QBERTV LOAN MSimiinrKhoki ' t SALT TjATTW CITY TJTAH SUNDAY SEPTEMBER ?1917 N sti towfc fcne-- 1 HEEALD-KBPDBLICA- distinct advantages and safeguarding features which an account in a responsible institution affords— are treading on firm ground by transacting their fairs through this dium : af- me- The’ maximum of safety and service in the handling of the accounts of depositors is rendered by us - DOMENICA PERELLI VS DOMENICO PERELLI Suit for divorce on the ground ol cruelty drunkenness and nonsupport has been filed In the dUtrict court by Domenlca Perelil against Domenico Perelli Plalritlff alleges that for more than a year the husband has been in and the' habit of coming home drunk beating her and that he did: not provide BOY DROWNED AT CHILDREN EAGER TO PRACTICE if the piano would he more “ was IN TUNE SANITARIUM BATHS 556 W First South Ephraim Foster 10 years old was drowned at the Sanitarium baths 52 W Third South street yesterday afternoon Patrolmen Warden and Payne regardless of traffic ordinances rushed the boy to the emergency hospital where Dr Keyting pronounced him dead after efforts to resuscitate him with the Call Wasatch 2670 street about pul-mot- or had proved futile THAN TMg n c I ft t I |