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Show THE UTAH BUDGET! i Moses S. Clark, S6 years of age, a j resident of Ogden for sixty-three years, died Monday. Injuries sustained by Jacob Phillips, Phil-lips, 81 years of age, when he was struck by a street car at Ogden proved fatal. Clairvoyants who are operating In Salt Lake in violation of the city ordinance or-dinance are to be arrested and put out of business. Charges of prejudicial argument and the use of the word "liar" resulted result-ed in a fist fight between two lawyers in the court room in Ogden. Twenty-five employees of one wholesale house in Salt Lake have pledged themselves to give $211.70 to the cause of charity in Salt Lake for the coming year. A new ru.ral mail route is to be established es-tablished ii Sugar House, Salt Lake county, 'beginning January 1, extending extend-ing over twenty-three miles and giving giv-ing 627 families advantages of rural mail delivery. The statement of the state treasurer treas-urer for the month of November shows a 'balance of $1,376,167.78 cash on hand at the close of the month. The halance on -hand on October 31 was $702,579.12. Efforts to organize the charitable organizations of Ogden with a view to obtaining greater efficiency in the distribution dis-tribution of aid to the poor are again being made by the churches and other organizations. After two years of instruction on the prevention of colds and contagious diseases, the number of cases of absence ab-sence at the Madison school In Ogden Og-den has been reduced one-half, according ac-cording to the principal. Threatening those in the store of Quong We Lung, Chinese, in Ogden, with a knife, a young Korean snatched $106 from the counter as Lung was making a payment In getting away he dropped $27.50. Mrs. Sophia Bourazanis, the aged mother of the Rev. Dorotheos Bourazanis, Boura-zanis, pastor of the Greek Orthodox church at Salt Lake, was discovered dead at her home. Indications point to murder, with robbery as the motive. mo-tive. With a view to obtaining proper medical attention for children of parents par-ents who are unable to pay for such services, the Children's Aid society of Ogden has made arrangements to maintain a free dispensary for children. chil-dren. About 300 employees of the Southern South-ern Pacific shops at Ogden, who were laid off three weekB ago, have returned re-turned to work and local railroad men said indications pointed toward the retention of the men through the winter win-ter months. The explosion at the sugar factory at Elsinore about a year ago, repeated repeat-ed itself last week. The engine in the same room again became unman-agable unman-agable and exploded, sending pieces of iron through the ceiling and tearing tear-ing down one wall. John Zorla, Pete Bogdan and Dan Popovich, are alleged to have murdered mur-dered Louie Vrecha at Bingham. It is alleged that Zoria actually shot and killed Vrecha, but it is charged that the other two men were wltn him in a plot to kill Vrecha. Peter Zoladakis, a Greek, charged with having set the depot at Scofield on fire, in order that he might claim damages for goods of his stored therein, on which he had placed a fictitious fic-titious valuation, has been bound over to the district court for trial. The beet crop has been so heavy in the vicinity of Garland, Tremonton and Collinston that the Oregon Short Line filed a rate of $l a ton on beets from Garland to Sugar City, Idaho, and more than 18,000 tons of beets will be moved there this week. David K. Bowen, one of the pioneer settlers of Provo, is de-ad. Death was caused by pneumonia after an illness of one week. Mr. Bowen was well known in this community, being one of the Indian war veterans and actively ac-tively engaged in the early settlement of Provo. Legislative recommendations which may be made to the next session of the general assembly are being considered con-sidered by the state board of equalization. equali-zation. Meetings have been held for the purpose of considering the merits of certain bills whose design- embodies em-bodies the creation of greater revenues rev-enues for the state. The association of millers and grain dealers of Utah and Idaho proposes pro-poses to take the matter of wheat and flour freight rates from Utah and Idaho common points before the interstate in-terstate commerce commissior through the Traffic Service Bureau of Utah, in the hope an equitable adjustment ad-justment may be had. Charging negligence on the part of the railroad, Oscar T. Jones has insti tuted suit against the Denver & Ric Grande company in an effort to recover re-cover $12,400 damages for injuries alleged al-leged to have been received June 24 1913, when his automobi-e was struck by an engine near Roy, Weber county Members of the United Commercial Clubs of Salt Lake county announce a new step in their plan to establish a co-operative sugar factory and follow it with the statement that when this enterprise has been launched they wi!'. start work for a co-operative meal packing plant and stockyards. George A. Black, formerly territorial terri-torial secretary of Utah, and who wa known as Governor Black, because he had served as governor of this state during the absence of the governor, died at Waiisburg, Warm., Novembe-27, Novembe-27, at the sr" nf 3 |