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Show THE UTAH BUDGET JoHOph Relther hns he.'n appointed poHtmitHter at loka, vice U K. Ander-aon, Ander-aon, resinned. The postmaster ncneral has deals;-tinted deals;-tinted lieber City a pontal buvIuks depository de-pository erTertlve Jununry 15. Ocden hunters killed 1,200 rabbits west of town one day last week, the bunnies being; distributed anions the (harituble associations. The I-hi Commercial ( lub Is making; mak-ing; a strotiK bid for the steel plant which Governor Spry has said could be landed for 1'tnh county. The new passenger station of the Ix-nver & Uio Grando system at Price, coatlntc about fIS.000. was turned over last week to the company by the contractor. A the time approaches for the completion com-pletion of the Strawberry irrigation project, which is now scheduled for 1313, agitation for a sugar factory at or near Payson Is being renewed. Following an Illness of three months from cancer of the stomach, Gerard R Denkers, senior partner of the U. II. Denkers & Sons job printing establishment estab-lishment at Ogden, died Sunday morn-in morn-in if. Marlon Miller, aged 2C, a clerk, died in his cell at the city prison in Suit Lake. Dr. II. II. Sprague declared the cause of death to be heart failure, superinduced su-perinduced by excessive use of alcohol. alco-hol. Salt Ike Is overrun by mendicants. mendi-cants. Since the beginning of the most recent spell of cold weather, from three to five men have been ar-rated ar-rated each day on the charge of beg. Sin. Augustus P. Perkins, veteran grocer gro-cer and traveling salesman, a resident resi-dent of Salt Lake City for the past two decades, died Friday. Two years prior to his death Mr. Perkins retired from active death. December 15 was the final pay day of the year by the Amalgamated Sugar company to the beet sugar growers In Weber county. In Ogden $100,000 was paid out for sugar beets received since November i. The defiance of J. E. Munsey, union labor leader of Salt Lake, will probably prob-ably land him In Jail at Ixs Angeles. Munsey has declared that he will refuse re-fuse to testify before the federal grand Jury In the dynamite case. Two "masked men assaulted Mrs. G. W. Culver in Ogden, tearing from her ears diamond ear-rings worth $2,000 and tearing rings from her Angers valued at $200. Her ears were torn and her Angers badly mutilated. Several hundred dollars were realized real-ized for the striking shopmen's benefit bene-fit fund by the sale of "tags" on the streets of Ogden Saturday. The "tag , day" campaign was engineered by the union clgarmakors of the city. i At a meeting of the state board of ' pardons Inst week a pardon was grant- 1 ed to William M. Maudsley, who was i sentenced to one year's Imprisonment . In Washington county September 11 ' last, on the charge of grand larceny. The first conviction for "slugging" I In connection with the shopmen's ' strike was had at Ogden lust we k, 1 when William Maloney, a union man, I was found guilty of assaulting David Varrlngton and sentenced to pay a i One of $75 and costs. Alfred Hanson was killed while thawing giant powder near Logan, his body being found by his mining part- ner, who had gone to the mine to see 1 aby Hanson did not come to his din- ner. Hanson was nearly CO years old 1 snd hul been engaged In mining all his life. I The burglar who stole twelve Iml- atlon hams from W. T. Jackson, a I Salt Lake butcher, probably wg dls- ippolnted when he started o slice the ' lupposed ham for bieakfast. They sere merely bara of sawdust prepared ' :o bang In the window as an &lver-isement. &lver-isement. That (hd ri-ct-nt snows and rain In Rait Luk Valley and other parts ol ' the Iflivrhiountuln country augur weil ior (be crops of 1912 Is the opinion ; 4 men who are familiar with the t ' uation and have made a study of conditions con-ditions of the principal watersheds ol 1 the country. ' Jacob Gibson, one of the Jurors In J the trial of Henry Sonthwoith. at Ogden, Og-den, for the killing of Hand Mating' Ned Hanks, has In en set apart by his fellow jurors as a Philistine. He has but one child, while his eleven usso- t dales on the Jury have t-ighty seven ( bitwec-n them. - Guilty of murder In th flrsj degreft, , with recommendation for life Imprls- nnment in the siute penitentiary, was t the verdict rendered by the jury in the case of Klmcr L Ispwey, arc use j t of lh murder of Sergeant J. Herfry Johnston of the Salt Lake police force on July 5, 1911. Mrs. Jeanelte Kimball Ijiwrence ' nbo came to Salt Luke In ISta, iwt 1 yeers afl r the first set: li-.m- it of ti 1 valley, die at her h m i !:i S-lt I-.k ' December 15. Siie wit li.e lfe ol 1 Henry W. Lawrence, rominlaaioner ' elect of the city governnu rjt. t James CosErove, a laborer In the ' employ of the Orrsjon Short Line railroad. ,is lrstanily i 1 by a train on the Weber river hrH?e ap- r proachlrig at ()Un. Cos-trove wai a wheeling a wheclharrow f rom-rett across the railrnal trick and did no) fl e the train apprnnc hlnc. j Cold weather hns nur (errors than the penitentiary for Frank lUrch. a wanderer from Jersey City. N. J. Rather Ra-ther than face the Icy blasts of a flab n December In 112. Wren aked Dia- r trict Ju4ge Itooth at Piovo tor an ad- c dltional sU mouths la prison. 1 t |