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Show THE UTAH BUDGET! I.i'lii In panning to roimlnu'.t ttlx j Or H!V('U IllllcH UIDI'O Of CUIIieilt slue- walliH. In order Hint tho school children mU;liL n Id In the bci't r viihL, tho schools of I'lil wci'ii cloned (ill week. A conjoint ti'iu-lii'iH' lnnl.lt life of Utah, Juali mill WiiHiitch c'oiiiiI.Uih wan j held In Springvillo I'Yiday ami Satur-Jay. Satur-Jay. 'J'lio 1c:k'Ihth anil nludeulH of tho llrlgliiini Young university at 1'rovo, on October 17 celebrated tins ilhlrty-eighth ilhlrty-eighth anniversary of tho founding of the Kcliool. Arthur Goecke, who developed "lockjaw'' some tinio after ho had been run over by a wagou In Suit liiiko, September 28, la said to bo recovering at a sail i.anu nospitai. The body f Curl ft. lOricksou of Ogi(,en, who hr.d been inlsHiug for .several days, wxs found Sunday In a lonely Kpot on tho banks of Weber river. 1 1 o liad suicided, taking carbolic car-bolic acid. Olenites will have an opportunity of seeing the recent fashion show. Including tno children's jiarade, iho baby show and tho Industrial parade In the "movies" lu a few days at one of the local theatres As a sequel to tho shooting at Og-den Og-den last December of Mrs. Edith May Doc-Mack by her husband, Glen H. Mack, -who then shot himself and has Blnce been blind, a decree of divorce was granted Mrs. Mack last week. William and Charles Samuelson, brothers, aged 16 and 18 years, have confessed to beating and robbing a. Japanes- in Salt Lake City. The victim vic-tim asse.-its he lost $1,500, but the boys declare, they secured nothing of value. Dr. Elmer 'Crafts, president of the Utah 'Slate Veterinarians association, died at American Fork, October 18, after being confined to his bed for nine days. He was itaken ill with a heavy chill, which developed into malaria mal-aria fever. Suspected of being a member of tbe Black Hand, Tedesle Bellcastro, 30 years of age, was arrested at the old copper plant In North Salt Lake. He is also alleged to have shot and seriously ser-iously wounded Bigio Salome, an Italian Ital-ian grocer in Salt Luke. Mrs. Hannah Brown was seriously injured at Monroe while taking" lunch to members of the family who were at work in a beet field. She was thrown violently from the buggy, the wheels passing over her head. It is thought her skull is fractured. More than a ton of groceries has been consigned out of Ogden to Jar-bidge, Jar-bidge, Nev., by parcel post within the past few weeks, and as a result the railroad over which the mail matter is transported finds itself in the unique position of competing against itself. A mass meeting attended by 1,600 was held in the tabernacle at Prevo, Sunday night, under the auspices of the Law and Order league. Citizens were urged to vole at the coming city election for the enforcement of the prohibition laws upon tne ordinance nooks of the city. Hawley Scofield, 15-year-old son of Joseph G. Scofield of Spring Ci'ty, was riding a horse which ran intq a telephone pole against which hq was thrown. He sustained a fracturq of each leg, one being broken in two places; a dislocated hip and several other minor injuries. A. J. Turner, Oliver Carlson and, Owen Hamp, all of Logan, were injured in-jured when an automobile, speeding, it is said, at the rate of forty miles an hour, turned turtle. The accident is said to have been caused by a broken wheel, as the result of strik. ing a bump in the road. Great sums of money are being ex- pended in making improvements in the electrical generating plants of the Utah Light & Railway company in Big Cottonwood and Ogden canyons, and within a few months these producing statistics will have been 'brought up to the maximum of efficiency. The records of the district office of the foresit service in Ogden show that thirty-three hydro-electric power plants are operating in district No. 4 on national forest land, some under permit and some in alleged trespass now involved in litigation pending in the circuit court of appeals. All hotels of Salt Lake City are crowded with tourists and the sightseeing sight-seeing cars are doing more business this month than in any previous October, Oc-tober, according to local hotel men. The fine weather which has been en. joyed this month is responsible lor the influx of tourists at this time. Physicians of Ogden are recommending recommend-ing boiling of drinking water in that the 'boiling of drinking water in that city, as a result of the recent exami-nation exami-nation made by the state chemist and also by Prof. George W. Bailey, instructor in-structor of chemistry at the Ogden high school. The presence of germs was found in all water, they declare. Italians of Utah, under the direction of the Sons of Italy society of Salt Lake, on October 12, celebrated the anniversary of the discovery of America Amer-ica by their illustrious countryman, Christopher Columbus, in the most elaborate festival of its kind ever held in the state. An article prepared by H. T. Haines, Utah, state commissioner of immigration, immigra-tion, labor and statistics, on agricuk tural opportunities in the state, haa been printed in Polish by the depart, ment of labor of the United States department of agriculture. 1 |