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Show UTAH STATE 111 Twenty three poultry raisers of Bpringviile met last week and organized organ-ized the Springville Poultry association. associa-tion. Convicted of shooting ducks without licenses, Spiros Chiros and Gust G. Condas were fined $50 each at Salt Lake. Vernon Sheller, employed at a cleaning clean-ing and dyeing establishment in Salt Lake, was painfully burned about the head and body by the explosion of gasoline. Three men were injured, two seriously, se-riously, at Storrs, when a bucket in which they were riding down the tram from the mine jumped the cable and crashed into a tower. George Moore, charged with the murder of Mrs. Sadie Wilkinson, will be placed on trial November 23 at Salt Lake. The death of the woman occurred following an automobile ride. The killing of . four bears, the mother and three half-grown cubs, with five shots was the record established estab-lished by three Ogden valley hunters who secured their game near Liberty. Frank DePreo, who is charged with having killed Eugene Allen, a clerk at the Highland Boy store in Bingham, several months ago, will face the court and a jury on November Novem-ber 9. The first shipment of goods to leave Salt Lake for Red Cross use in Europe Eu-rope was made Monday by the five women who started the movement some weeks ago to contribute relief supplies. As a result of nonunion electricians having been put to work on the New-house New-house hotel at Salt Lake, all union workmen employed on the building, about eighty in number, were ordered to strike. That the disease which has killed thousands of wild ducks in Utah during dur-ing recent years is curable has been demonstrated by experiments conducted conduct-ed by the state fish and game commissioner. com-missioner. Three people were stabbed, one seriously, seri-ously, when Elmer Wright, about 40 years of age, ran amuck in Washington Washing-ton avenue, Ogden, while the downtown down-town district was crowded with Saturday Satur-day night shoppers. With the man's pet dog standing juard and occasionally interrupting the vigil with a mournful howl, the dead body of William Dunbar, a bachelor, bach-elor, was found at his home in Ogden. Death was due to heart disease. Notice of the withdrawal of 123 sections, sec-tions, containing 78,720 acres of land, in the eastern part of Emery county, has been received at the Salt Lake land office. The land withdrawn is included in-cluded in the Colorado river storage project. Expulsion from the University of Utah may be the fate of the three students stu-dents who were, arrested at Salt Lake on a charge of defacing public property prop-erty by pasting advertising signs thereon, the signs advertising a football foot-ball game. As a means of filling the great demand de-mand for more school buildings temporarily tem-porarily at least, the buildings and grounds committee of the board of education of ,Salt Lake is considering the possibility of using sma:l portable port-able school buildings. James Price, 76 years of age, and one of the oldest l.iv'ng pioneers of Wasatch county, is dead at his home in Charleston as the result of internal injuries received in Heber City when his horse took fright at a load of bear hides and ran away. Frank F. Merrill, former guard at the Utah state prison, has been taken to the prison to serve an indeterminate indetermin-ate term for assisting George W. Parry, Par-ry, a degenerate, serving a sentence of sixty-one years, to escape from the prison more than a year ago. Suit for a permanent injunction to 3lose down the smelting plants of the American Smelting & Refining company com-pany and the United States Smelting company near Midvale has been filed in the United States district court for Utah by Henry H, Wheeler and sixty-two sixty-two others. That Cedar valley's 100,000 level acres, lying in the west side of Utah county, just over the mountain from Utah lake, is destined to become an important section, is evidenced from the record of dry-farm wheat yields now coming in, one machine threshing thresh-ing 23,000 bushels. Payments of the state corporation tax are coming into the office of the secretary of state briskly, though not due until November 15. October 1 the office sent out notices that the tax would be due November 15, and ln consequence con-sequence about ?2,500 has been received re-ceived already. Efficiency In housekeeping is the keynote of a plan presented to the Weber We-ber county commissioners for the employment em-ployment cf a public housekeeper whose duty it would be to see that the households of persons dependent wholly or in part on the county and charitable institutions are conducted with the least waste possible. Several chiropractors, representing he practitioners of that profetsion from all parts of the state, calied on governor William Spry last week to request that he recommend to the legislature leg-islature the passage of a bill recognizing recog-nizing ehiropracty as a school of mtd-cine, mtd-cine, Philip Garcia, a Mexican. 40 years of to, w:is found lying rn tho ground p. a su'.jur'.i of fa'.t Lake, with both cs b:t.fn ar:d sneering fro:a other n;ur;p- :'n '' .1 c !:o:!y. He had been ::iock "ro:u i trosile by a pabdng rain. |