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Show Edith Karken, daughter of City Marshal Karren of Lehi, writes to the Salt Lake Herald explaining that she was never driven away from home by her parents and that they never have ill treated her. When she said this she was mad and discontented and she did not realize that the advice and counsel of her parents was for her good and benefit. She wishes it . understood under-stood that she loves and respects her parents and hopes that the accident 6he met with in being lured to a house of ill-fame will be a lesson not alone to her in all her life but to all her girl friends and acquaintances. In the letter she beseaches her girl friends to alwajB obey and take their parents' counsel as she intends" to do in the future. fu-ture. Israel Evans is over from Lehi today. to-day. ' Albert Glazier appeared before Justice vVedgwood last evening at 7 o'clock. While standing upon the bank corner waiting for the judge, he again met George Dusenberry and another an-other jangle ensued, the result of which was that Albert again struck George. George today wear a bruised face and Albert a sprained thumb. Justice Wedgewood fined Mr. Glazier the sum of $10.00 for his two scraps, which was paid. Not long ago certain Salt Lake policemen po-licemen observed a certain hack drive regularly on dark nights to a place near the Holy Cross hospital corner, stop, ltB 1 ghts go out and a woman come running out of a nearby house, the driver get down and tie his horses and the two go inside the hack together. In a half hour 01 so the woman would come out and go into the house, the hackman would light up his vehicle, untie his horeea and drive off. One night the policemen who had watched these proceedings broke into the hack, lit a match suddenly aud caught the guilty pair in a compromising compromis-ing position. The woman was a society soci-ety belle, the mother of a family and wife of a respected husband. She and her illicit hackman lover were taken to police headquarters where the two pleaded hard for mercy. The officers finally promised, for the sake of the woman's family, to let her go and keep her name a secret, she promising never to sin again. The officers however" ran to theTribune with the whole story and that paper published it as a racy bit of r.ews, giving the location and all details except names. As a result different women who reside in the neighborhood neighbor-hood have been suspected and accused of being the criminal the paper referred refer-red to, and now an investigation of the affair by the grand jury has been demanded. ' Tr.e newspaper reporter refused to disclose to the grand jury the name of his informant, It was thought he would be imprisoned for contempt but he was let go. City Marshal Pratt, Detective Sheets and Desk-Sergeant Ftrgusen were brought before the grand jury They did not refuse to state what they knew of the particulars particu-lars of the case; they admitted that they knew the names of theguiliy parties, but they refused absolutely to divulge those names. They were hauled up before Judge Barcb on a charge of contempt and a racy scene in court ensued, the result ol which was the three officers spent the night in jail. Thus ended the second act in this tragedy and the curtain dropped, ' It has not raised on the third act yet. The concert at the Baptist church last evening to aid "The Farther Lights" in their benevolence was highly entertaining. The management of the concert de3ire The Dispatch to say that they are especially indebted to Mrs. Kob Irvine for the well arrangad program, and to all for the nappy rendering. This kind favor from the talent of Provo will be remembered as iacense, and serve to strengthen the brotherhood of man. Each part was so well executed as to call forth admiration, ad-miration, but the declamation of Mr. W. E. Rydalchof the B. Y. academy was so enthusiastically encored as to call a humorous response, appreciated by all. It is tc be regreted that the threatening ciouds kept so many awav from this high-toned entertainment. |