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Show SALT LAKE OGDEN GIRL IS TAKEN TO A HOSPITAL Salt Lake. March 10. Miss. Kuth MoKlnnon of Ogden, aged 10 years, fainted on the street last nlchl and ! was taken to the ISmSl :ency hospital, where she was attended bj Dr. H. B. , Sprague and soon restored to her noi - J mal condition Miss McKinnon is the' daughter of Mr and Mrs. J. I McKinnon Mc-Kinnon Of '-'J West Twenty-ninth street Ogden, and is a cousin of Detective De-tective V. B. May of Salt Lake. Mr and Mrs. May and Mis.-, McKin- i non had gone to the Libert) theater and while watching the performance.! Miss McKinnon complained that sin did not feel well and said she would, go outsire for a few minutes. Shortly Short-ly alter. Mr. and Mrs May left the I theater, but could not find their cons- J in They called up their hotel, and ' teamed that she had not returned I there, and were becoming much distressed dis-tressed when they learned that she I had been taken to tbe Emergency hospital. It appeared that after leaving the thcatn Mis McKinnon fainted on the street Sho was taken Into the Dayton Day-ton drug store and the polite notified noti-fied A few minutes later she WM being cared for by Dr Sprague The girl's parents arris ed last nUht from Ogden and took her from the Emergency hospital to a hotel Her physician in Ogden says she is suffering suf-fering from au abscess of the liver. BROWN LECTURES ON "LURE OF SEA" Salt Lake March in The Lure ot the Sea" was the subject of an interesting inter-esting lecture hv Captain K-lwin G Brown in Tints hall last night under un-der the auspices ot the l nltarian society so-ciety Captain Brown is well known here The memory of the wreck on Utah lake. June 4 lftll, from which he helped to save nine passengers, and In which six persona, including three or his own children, were drowned, is still fresh in the minds of Salt Lake citizens Five of those saved from the wreck were at the meeting last niht. Explaluing that he was born and spent his early boyhood on the eastern east-ern coast of Scotland, and that the earliest recollection he had was of a ship that had especially impressed his Infant fancv, Captain Brown reviewed review-ed brlelly seventeen years of his most active work on the ocean During that time he was continually moving about from one country to the other, and worked his way from cabin boy to captain. He suffered everv imaginable imag-inable form of privation known to tho sea, and yet asserted without hesitation hesita-tion that his happiest moments had been spent on the water, and that he still and alwass would lose that life Captain Brown said that bis firsl experience on the ocean would have to bo told second-handedls . as he had not the slightest remembrance of It It was when he was 3 years old and ho had none to the water edee with his moter. Ills mother was busy, according ac-cording to the story, and he managed to pull an old tub to the water and was being carried out to sea In it when discovered and rescued. They t.old me that I seemed to be enjoying ihe voyage.'' ho said, "and that always al-ways after that first voyage I as crazy to go to sea." |