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Show UTAH STATE NEWS The new grand council of t,ie Native Na-tive Sons of Utah is to be incorporated. incorpor-ated. Two nineteen-year-old Ogden boys will serve live days in jail for Insulting Insult-ing women on the streets. The post office at Helper has been designated a depository for postal eavings, effective February 20. In attempting to board a train near Murray, Thomas Reaves, aged 17, of Salt. Lake, was thrown under the wheels and mangled beyond recognition. recogni-tion. Getting possession of a key with which they unlocked a rear door early ear-ly in the evening, four girls made their escape from the slate industrial Rchool Wednesday night. Joseph Rackman, eleven years old, in In the Ogden hospital suffering from a bullet wound in the right cheek, inflicted by a companion while returning from hunting. There are 749 factories in the state, representing a combined capital of $53,000,000 and the combined gross output totallod last year $62,000,000, or nearly double the annual output of the U'ah mines and smelters. David Pingroo, for the last seven years acting field agent for the Amalgamated Amal-gamated Sugar company, died at his home in Ogden Thursday, after a short illness, from ' dilation of the heart. Mr. Pingree was 47 years old. James Gushing, one of the early pioneers of Utah, died at his home in Siindy Janaury 23, of general debility. debil-ity. He was eighty-one years old and was a native of England. He came to Utah in 1S53, settling in Salt Lake. An election was held in Carbon county high school district on January Janu-ary 23 to decide whether or not to bond the district for $45,000 for a high school building at Price. The proposition carried by a large majority. major-ity. - - A booster committee has been ap-pointed ap-pointed by the Weber club to attend the Slate Horticulture society's convention con-vention at Provo during the latter part of this month to secure if poss-sible poss-sible next year's convention for Ogden. Og-den. Dr. C. L. Olsen of Murray, member mem-ber of the state board of medical examiners, ex-aminers, has been appointed by Gov- ernor Spry to be a delegate from Utah to the medical education and legislation council at Chicago, February Feb-ruary 26 to 27. A walnut table made for Brigham Young fifty years ago, afterwards given to one of the mayors of Salt Lake, has been found in the office of the juvenile court in Salt Lake, anO. will probably be presented to the Deseret museum. Dynamite,' placed with malicious Intent, wrecked the saloon and hotel of W. R. Dows at Garrison, in Millard Mil-lard county, Tuesday night, but no one was injured. Mr. Dows believes the explosive was placed uader his buildings by some fanatic. An electric light wire, which had fallen across the cellar floor, caused the death of George C. Burton, thirteen thir-teen years old, of Salt Lake. The boy had gone to the cellar to gather wood to replenish the grate fire, when he came in contact with .tne wire. Mrs. Amanda C. Shaw, who was run down by an automobile in Salt Lake, and who it was thought would not survive the shock, has so far recovered re-covered as to be able to leave the hospital. The auto was driven by a son of A. W. McCune, the millionaire mining man. To have his bottle of moustache dye pronounced by a keen-scented Ogden policeman to be a mixture of opium and to be thereupon thrown into jail on a charge of being a "hop head" was the unique experience of Harry Hall, a newly arrived shop worker from the east. The woolgrowers of Wasatch county coun-ty concluded a successful two-days' convention at Heber on Wednesday. J. J. Knollin of the Knollin Commission Commis-sion company of Chicago, who is on one of his annual tours of the western west-ern states in behalf of the woolgrow-ing woolgrow-ing industry was a speaker. Seven hundred people sat down to the banquet given by the Sandy Commercial club Wednesday night, following its big "get together" meeting. meet-ing. The gathering was held for the purpose of bringing the suburban clubs together with a view to their working for the benefit of towns. Among the special prizes to be awarded at the State Dairymen's association as-sociation 'at Provo is a gold watch or a $15 camera for the buttermaker winning the highest score and using ' a certain kind of butter coloring. All buttermakers scoring ninety-three points will be each awarded a gold fountain pen. Bert Cheney has been bound over to the district court Ty a Provo jus-lice jus-lice on charges of having committed assault with intent to commit murder mur-der on Joseph Householder in American Amer-ican Fork last December. Chejy Btabbed Householder with a knife. S. I. Shafer, cashier of the State Bank of Tooele, who with George H. Higgs and A. B. Walton robbed the bank of $9,000 last June, was liberated liber-ated from the penitentiary by the state board of pardons Saturday. Higgs was pardoned a few months ago and Walton Wal-ton is still in prison. |