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Show UTAH SfflE NEWS There will be a grain crop harvest- ed around Delta this year of approximately approxi-mately 310,000 bushels. It is estimated 250.000 sheep will winter In eastern Utah, between Green River and the state line. Salt Lake will entertain between 1.200 and 1.500 members of the National Na-tional Association of Master Bakers next year. Curtis B. Blanchard, well known in mining circles of the west for over thirty years, dropped dead on Main street in Salt Lake. Richardson is to have its first school. The people are to erect the building, which will be ready soon, and school will last seven months. The office of the attorney general was last week moved to the state cap-itol. cap-itol. This is the first of the state offices to be installed in the new state house. John Ladson, aged 45 years, was rjuni dead in his room at a lodging house, in Salt Lake. Examinations showed that he had died of natural causes. George F. Brown, aged 68 years, a former resident of Ogden and past master of Weber lodge, F. and A. M., died suddenly in Los Ajigeles from heart failure. Damage that will require more thaa $100 to repair resulted during a severe se-vere electrical storm, when a bolt of lightning struck the postoffice building build-ing at Ogden. Henry M. Royle, Sr., who held the distinction of being the fi;st white boy born in Lehi, died September 26, froai the eftects of cancer. He was born June 22, 1S51. There have been 25.275 persons sign ;he reeisrer in the Utah stale building at the Panama-Pacific exposition since the opening up to and including tha week just ended. Charles A. Robh, aged 40, a railway conductor whose home was in Sai: Lake, was instantly killed while switching cars at LehL No one witnessed wit-nessed the accident. Angelo Reanaldi of Garfield, 23 years of age, until last week assistant foreman of the repair crew at the Arthur Ar-thur mill, is on his way to taly to join the king's army. Mumps was the prevailing ailment In the county schools in the Granite district last week, according to tas weekly report of the school nurses of the county health department. On the Heber Harrison farm near Lehi a yield of 500 bushels' of Turkey-Red Turkey-Red wheat was garnered from ten acres. Julius Otterson. near by. threshed eighty bushels from two acres. Mary Susanna, the 14-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Wellington Woods. Jr., died at Spanish Fork from blood poisoning resulting from a broken wrist received about a week previous. Progress is being made on the new 6teel bridge at Dewey, north of Moab, I to span the Dolores river. The bridge j will tie of one span and will cost $20,-000. $20,-000. t is figured it will double Moab's business. Shot accidentally by her 3-year-old grandson at Garfield, Mrs. Elmin Sickenger, aged 59, has sucumbed to her injuries. The child found a pistol and, pointing it at his grandmother, pulled the trigger. Max Seiberg was arrested ia Thompsons, charged with insanity. He had been in Thompsons for some time and it is said that worry over relatives rela-tives fighting for Germany in the European war drove hi:u insane. Gregoris Bitsakis. who is alleged to have shot John Seitz at Bingham last spring, must stand trial en a charge of murder. A jury in the district court at Salt Lake declared him sane, after deliberating for two hours. There is a little honey plant in operation oper-ation near Tremontou. Box Elder county, which is shipping the product I from 700 hives of bees. Only tha i comb honey is bains canued this sea- : son. Two carloads will be shipped this fall. ' : Death claimed a widely-known resident resi-dent of Ogden last week when Lorenzo Lo-renzo Farr, 5t5 years of age, son ot tho first mayor of Osdt u. died at Ta-hoe Ta-hoe tavern. Lake Tahoe, Cal., while on his way to Honolulu to recupera'.e his health. The completion of the Mack-Grand Junction ond of the J. N. Corbin tele phono lino from Mack to Cisco last week witnessed the first telephone conversation between the Colorado terminal ot the Uintah railway and Cisco, I'tah. Near Vernal, on the George W. ! Perry farm, 1.5S0 bushels of grain were threshed from twenty-four acres. His wheat totaled 775 bushels from thirteen nnd a half acres, and from ten and a half acres he threshed S0. bushels of oats. i Threo days of enjoyment marked tho Sanpete county fair last week. Kvery day was full of Interest, owlns to tho excellent races that were hold. ; Some of the best horses in the state were on the track and gixM purses Riven, totaling JI.S00. Wank Knox, who organi.-ed the National Na-tional Hank ot the Republic at Salt Invito in 1S!H. becoming president ot the Institution, ihiob. position he held for twenty-tive years, died September 25. from a complication of ailments L. from which ho had suffered for almost a year. i Arthur Iwls, who has been work- tng with the rope sang t the snu'l-t"r snu'l-t"r at Tooele about two yens, badly crushed 1. -i.it week. The work- ; men were dissembling n slag settler when one of the slide fell on Mr. vwls. sinking him In the chest. |