Newspaper Page Text
t- THE SALT LAKE TRIBUNE, THURSDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 6, 4913 " " ? m '.. lountain News piiFr IflSfjll DEEDS p Legislature Gives Wo ijoint Control of Prop yty With Husbands. , m Tht Tribune. iii E'-Th0 l?,s,at,ire Si a' record In Uio poasaKe of f lysine twelve measures to tho most Important fr bit providing that In ..?of the Property of cither afr-'.r wife. Hie namea of both rV. The measure Is one ITi to tho women of this B" Am 11 docr ,Sontro1 f A8S hcretoforn Held W &P8fi!fivMt before the P bST Vo US by Uio Judl- i SdMee Representative , Dlckln- riunti' who ga ncd no- Bffs senatorial flfiht by A, colored Janitor, attacked motive "behind the measure, lHS?nS : iwlted by "women who raiiW." Tho club women MStySfWrS the bill, llepro Mt&rman of tHe.com im: .B tne slurring remark and BvMrtd Dickenson. . itnpcd a heated conleBt ' fcDian E resolution, reHtrlcttn S,Ji( U ""Preme court and -"i'!itlve control over that body, B&t of the measure finally .LT: by securing a favorable ro PlrW commit teo of the whole t ifSaold pass. During the argu iiliwarl was scored for its nc Vlh rectnt contempt case In newspapor men were sent Ulrfln addition fined Senator W the attack. Si cf the rapid spread of hog this sUte the house, upon tho Siltlon of Governor IJaynos, Jfwi RppropriallnK 55000 for tho ad distribution of cholera measure will be rushod iv ttnate tomorrow and im fm&iS Active the signature of the CONVICT ARRAIGNED. KAttsmey Asks for Dismissal of ; Forgery Charges. itftoThe Tribune. WTO, Feb. 5. Charles D. Romero, fat tire froni Nebraska by former fc jcid after serving seven years Krr;, xras arraigned today on a tec! Utfv.g forged a cheek for WOO bin prior to his conviction In Ne Bl Romero did not deny the allega EWdtlmeU that he had served time fcruia for all his forgeries. Includ iftjcca liera. , met li a physical wreck after hlfl EfcStsrMDt. nnd District Attorney ft KcItaiM moved to dismiss the k. He caid that he realised thai Icier confinement In Jail -would nth em's death. The court took lulu? under advisement. nflfiivta investor will do well to in-"Mosida-by-the-Lnkc." irri SBkiluk Fieo information for ask tfttiooa Savings & Trust Co.. top ffMit Bank bui'dine, Salt Lake (jf&rtri. (Advertisement.) I, sports cton Race Ecsults oae-quarter of a mile, purse a. lit (Koerner). 3 to 2, iVattrr. 11 fMoore). G to 1, intoru (Wilson). .1 to i. :t, five' furlongs, selling 103 fTroxlor). 10 to 1. won; 105 (Derando), S to 5, scc ih. 100 (Wolf). 2 to 1. third, -relit eelllnjr Gardenia. 107 to 2, won: Continental. 107 a. second: Armor, 100 (Mar . third. Time, 1:46 4-5. . mile and an eighth. sell Donald McDonald. 10S (But jron; Font. lOfi (Musgravc). 5 Jacqtilllna. OS (Derando). 'Time, 1-5S 3-5. . Jive furlongs, selling Tony 40. 12 to 1. won: Cnmcl. ; to l, second: Goeur Snider). 2 to 1.. third. Time. ; mile 3cMng Haldcman, vtli i to 2. won; Spellbound, ku t,J' "cond: T.ucky snider). 12 to l. third. Time, lesion B?.co Entries. to wid a quarter furlong, wiiSiS'Ja JntScxA (Ml.. 06 C937 Rulqarlan ..10S S-v'iSS 7012 Ur(1 ajah..ll0 iH -T olon no wi.lOS. 60.17 Corson ....113 e. '6ven.8lxtcenlbs of a b-ft'l!wl-3r0,Sr0,Slr,k OML.m ,301C TlertlH n-j iS-jMjttUN'Shty 1AI.112 Ihrce-quat-tcrs 0f a mile. 5?l6rS?l Pfemluin ...106 in 'i22 S25s Venola Str.,106 -..;.!io3i urd we-n ICf. three-quarters of a mile. B&SS!-A?ltrol ....103 SriiSS 5i8a Cherryola -..10B ft .y.ios' ahvofd . All JJlKr t,tVCn'8i:lcc,ltl13 1)1 J 2i '0; Thetis 107 lj!ra - ioxi GOSo Maurice IVd 1H . 'IS Uar.lOTJ Co1 Cook 1 1 iMllf Jencors Win. 'HwvSlJS -raval academy i7 SI- bom '?nceV here this W oft by n1.? t0 thr. von i? Vn. r&rtn H10 tWrd try. a Kw calie,i ,natcl1' "Da eSfe fm" a. , - Tas, defeated of any nfto6, tho ni0t of u, 0 Harvard fflfMjKH? Ih .Sr vet'k- Hl has n. but the wrestler , im an,cle durlntr a :3mMr. Co. fin8, MSlt Jjalt PLOT TO OVERPOWER JIE0TJJS11TED Greek Feigned Illness in At tempt to Overpower Jailer, and Escape. Spo;lal to The Tribune. POCATIiDl.0, Ida., Feb. fl. A. desper ate plot to overpower Jailor jjewls of tlio county Jail, Jock him in a steel- cage and permit tho escape of over twenty pris oners, was frustratod last ulsht by the sheriff ar.d hlo doputles. Sam PouIoub, a desperate criminal, possibly of inUr nalionat record, was tho leador of tho plot. Soon ftfver Lho deputies and tho BherlfC left the JaJl last nlffht oha of tho prisoners In tho corridor .Hopped a po destrJan pfiflsin the Jail and told him that PouiouB was dying and that Jailer .Lewis be notified Immediately. Tho en tire sheriff's iorco, however, arrived with a doctor and found Poulous felsnlnj? i-lcknota. immodlotoly recovered ttIUi a shock when ht- m.w tho number of the force. Tho plot, as rovQRled today by ono of thu prisoners, was to get Lewis Into tho steel cell, where ho "would bo overpow ered by tle Greek giant, Poulouo. and then, in possesion of the keys, 'Lewis would be locked in tho oell and the doors opened and a good cetaway effected. Charles Andrews. Immigration official, with ofilce at Butte. Is hero lnveBtigat Iny the oaso of Poulous. who ho thinks Is wanted In Groece for the murder of six prison guards, under the name of Kollns. There is a S12.0O0 reward offered for Kollns. Ill HI MEN lETTOJRGIZE Ex-Governor Hawley Predicts State Will Become Mining -Leader of Union. Special to The Tribune. BOISE, Ida., Feb. '5. Mining men-from nearly every mining district In tho stato arc attending tho first tate congress, which convened bore today, and judging from the intorest and enthusiasm shown an organization will bo porfocted which will bo ono of the strongest In the state. Judge J. I-L Richards, for six j'cars president of the national mining con gress, was chosen as temporary chair man, and J. F. Cooke of Boiso. secre tary. Tho mining men were welcomed to the city by former Governor James H. Haw ley. who spoko of tho importance of the Industry In this state. Of its advance ment, lie predicted that the day was not far distant when Idaho would be th'e greatest mining state In the union. i The address of the morning waa made by Judge Richards, -who spoko ably on mining conditions, advising men not to be In too big a hurry to perfect an or ganization, but to hold Bevoral meetings in different sections of the state, find out the needs of tho Industry, then organ ize and incorporate with a purpose In view, which, under such conditions, could he realized. During the afternoon addresses were made by J. B. Eldrldge and by George B. Bllvcn. after which a general discus sion on "what . constltutos wildcattlng" was taken up and somo able addresses were wade against tho systom which has already hurt tho Industry throughout the world. TThon Burton Holmes reoently gave his celebrated travelogue on "Pana ma" at Orchestra Hall, Chicago, he was seriously interrupted, by continual coughing of the audience. No one an noys willingly, nnd if people "with coughs, colds, lioiirBonees and tickling in throat "would use Foley 'u Honey & Tar Compound, they could quickly euro their coughs and colds nnd avoid tho annoyance. Schramm-Johnson, Drugs, "Tho Ncver-Snbstitutors," Five (u) Good Stores. (Advortisemont ) i Burglars Plead Guilty. Special to Thr. Tribune. N'lSPI-M, Fob. 5. County Sheriff Gus Henrold arrived hero last night from Eureka, having In custody V7, L,. Akin ;md George AVhlting, who pleaded guilty In a ?.Jammoth justice's court to bur glary. They broke into a butcher shop i if Mammoth recently. They vlll ho held In the Jail here pending trial In thu district court. Do you know that more real danger lnrlcs in a common o.old than in nny other of the minor ailmontn? The safe way is to tnko Chamberlain's Cough Remedy, a thoroughly reliable prepara tion, and rid yourself oC tho cold as rniicldy as possible. This remedy J3 lor galo by all donjers. "(Advertisement.) Chicken Thieves Finod. Special to Tho Tribune. PROVO, Feb. C Three young men liv ing on the Provo bench pleaded guilty to a charge of stealing ciiickens from Mrs. J. K. Parccll and were fined S10 :ach by Justlcu E. L. Jones this morn ing. Thoy wuro Vcrn Snow, Walter Bushman nnd JDavld Wilson. I AppoaJ to Supreme Court, i Sper.in 1 to The Tribune. PltOVO. Feb. 6. Albert Park, con victed last week on a statutory charge, wan sentenced by Judge A. B. Morgan to twenty months in tho fttatc poniten llury. An appeal to tho supremo court was taken ut once. Why You Should Bathe gnferimally Under our present modo of living Nature unassisted cannot dispose of all tho waste. This waste sends Its poisons Into tho system, through tho blood circu lation, and brings on countless 1 1 1 e v That'n tho reason a physician's first step In lllnean is to give a laxatlvo. Physicians generally, In order to stop thl3 accumulation of wraste, are now ad vising tho use of "J- B. L. Cancade, Nature's euro for Constipation, -which rids tho lower intostlno of all waste and kuops It healthy without drugging. lt Is now being: shown by Schramm Johnson, Drugs, "Tho Nnvor-Substitut-ors," Five (5) Good Storco. Axli for booklet "Why Man of Today is Only BO Pur Cont "Efficient," (Atlvortlsemenl.) i I ' Gambler King s Daughter Is Seeking Separation MRS. GRACE CAN FIELD HANNON. By International Nows Service. NEW YORK, Feb. 4. Married at tixtxecn, a onothor at seventeen, and. a prospective divorcee at nineteen. The foregoing are a few of tho interesting chapters -written in the short but eventful carcor of Mrs. Grace Canfiold. Haii non, daughter of Richard Can field, the former "gambling king." Mrs. Hannon, an pretty as ever, has asked for th'e appointment of a guardian that she might suo ATarlin Edward Hannon, her husband, for separation. She was only sixteen when, she eloped with young Han non, fresh from bis athletic triumphs at. Dartmouth, in. October, 1910, after her father had strenu ously objected to tho marriage bo cause of tho youth of his daughtor. The couple have one child, Peter, who is about a year old. OFFICIALS HEStGN ; IILEJB FIE Fight, on Clerk and Treasurer I of Carbon County Ends in Their Resignation. u , r l Special io The Tribune. ! PRICE, Fob. 5. At a meeting of thh 1 county commissioners of Carbon county here yesterday. County Clerk C. A. Plerson and County Treasurer C. H. Cody handed In their resignations. Tftie ! matter -was tabled by lho commissioners until Thursday of thlu -woek. Plorson and Cody have been under firo for somo time for alloged discrepancies Ui tho county book.". Editor Robert Crockett of the Advocate hat been par ticularly vehement in his condemnation of the officials. Already there is talk of candidates for tho positions which the resignation of tho officials will vacate It Is rumorod here that A. Jialllngcr and Oliver T. Harmon arc after tho lrt.vusuroHhyr and that R, It. Klrkpntrlck, formerly of Sun nysldo and now of Price, -will be a. candi date for the clerk's- office. Shields Funeral Held. Special to The Tribune. PARK C3TT, Fob. S. The funeral aervicoa for John Shields, pioneer busi ness man and former mayor of this city, were held today, with the Rev. Father Thomas Galllgan ofAcIatlng. All business houses -were closnd between 1;30 and 3 o'clock out of respect to tho prominent citizen and tho funeral was among tho largest ever held here. Tho pallbearers were Waltor Evnns. Jamei? Don, Potor Tallon, F. J. McL.auglilIn, Sherman Far go, J. Buck, S. Raddon and Nell Collins. A large number of friends of tho deceased camo out from Salt X,akc this morning to attend tho funeral. In terment was In Glenwood cemetery Oheuey Funeral Today. Special to The Tribune. BRIGTIAM CITY", Feb. o.Tomorrow afternoon funeral aen'ices will be held hi the First ward chapel for Mrt. Frank. Cheney, who died Monday afternoon at hor home, after a long Illness. Mrs. Cheney had relumed just a fow days previous from a hospital In Ogden and was considered to bo improving. Before hor marrlago sho was Miss Elizabeth Owen, and was born In Weber county forty-five years ago. Besides her hus band, she leaves three children. Ra1T)it Hunt Planned. Spoial to Tho Tribune. BRIGHAM CITY. Fob. 5. Friday sportsmen of TVebor county will run an excursion to the western pail of this county on a rabbit hunting expedition. Tho excursion will go to Hooper, and will 11 photo eHcnovev puitcsIB I I SU lNON ' II also include hunters from Ogden and other Weber county towns. Brlgham sportsmon have been extended an Invi tation to join the excursion In tills city. Tho special trtiln Is scheduled to pass Brlgham ;it 7 o'clock. Conferences Sunday. URIGHAM C1TT, Feb. v. Ward con ferences wlU bo held In thin city next Sunday, when tie four city wards will ffB meet in their respective chapels in tne H annual conference. The sessions will UMt open at .11 a. m. mid meeting will follow H aL.- and ' P- m. The annual reports of Hi officers wll. be heard. HH Wy p.ot try a Want Ad ? That 's tho 1H1 questioa asked tho young business RB womaj, loolciug for a place to board. 99 g Prices slaughtered in all departments, so there is absolutely no competition. After g"flBKh' m V m inventory we found an accumulation of many broken lots. This sale means a com- ' A aSiijmll- m !; H plete clearing of these, together with all winter merchandise. It means your dol- 'BspH ftt m B lars do more than double duty in many instances goods are offered at a fraction A H H K&K k R . ; 9 of the cost. No economical purchaser will let this opportunity pass. Come, help BBlfoSSSHB' H Sl ' I yourself to a feast of bargains, the like of which you will not have a chance to pur- jfl BB:iB jgj fl I MEN'S ! IHI j; I MEN'S PANTS For those wlio wish to make their old coat and vest do, we are oiffering 400 HjlP lwfffMSSliwB -l pahs of gw wool trousers, worth up to $5, for $2.95. FIREMEN'S BLUE UNIFORM ffMi. p mers furnishings Boys9 Bepartifienf HH Buy Strong, for Th:y Will Hot Last Long MotherSf don,t overlook this big barg.ain m mKBSm Stiff bosom white shirts, an extra special at 45c, for the boys act quick, for it's the last chance. 'llraMlPnf 9 i '' New lines of negligee French eufl! AtLgT 200 BOYS' SUITS Excellcut quality and worth Kirjlii i' ' ' shirts, ten dozen at flrJC from $5.00 to $7.50; ages 10 to 16.; JJE ltP SSfH I h : i And other now line of Fancy negligee shirts, as- your choice at: .-.4583 SmIS WMhD 9 9 r sorted patterns: A A JOO Boys' Koeftfr Overcoats, with values $7.50 to MimiMWwmimm a dandy value at JJJ.1ffW $12.06; ages 10 to 16; ftA Aff i9lWW Wi 1 i 1 M Nihtural wool cashmere hose; 25I5C choico ; P2rO 9lM I KMSlW W 9 B '"'"f" Wi m Vfl." u'01 "u 300 pairs Knickerbocker pants, values g&g WmMKtSwtmUS 9 qnV-'nZ W A Astrican lined caps; $1.00 to $1.50 tffcfi l-M 9 A5tSvaiues!eror 2 25 dozen Mothers' Friend and K. & ; jHHffip fSi i SlvdsCrat50C JUUl ?5C S. Blouses at half price. -pifWM 1 1 i M 1 Helutchcad ' i fV 'Ka EfoUarb 25C 'BllliMSSM I IS P a hnndkerchiers I JF , . , ififflKfft Wl M Bovs' two-piece underwear. flra 8 lfIr?hlSl lit I Wt MEWS UMBEEWEAE S0c, 75c and $1 values, to dose 'Ip Wlwl 9 P H'P Wl Wi 3000 pieces worth double and 50c Boys' outing flannel A 5 lM M WmM Pf ' M il M more; at, per garment OC "i&hl; shirts t M iSSi M 9 Wi W P III M For Big Men Bxtra sizes in wooen garments at $1.00 outing 0a.uiitij jgE $1.50 bath SM ?i fSsiSlS Wi ? B haf! price. Cooper's ribbed sliirts OCtf pajamas 03B robes fl80 SSwi W W"1l4M ' W ft m and drawers, worth $1. now OalL : " ' vfiS Wf. BHIH m W fl Flannelette Night Robes, A W QhCNE SPECIAL jJCg c Scotch gjj fiHF values 75e, now S 7 -8 C oOc calf skin ....b knit 11 i" i l I 9 This great opportunity to save dollars on all your clothing lasts but a few days and you must hurry hurry to jjp' Ej jjfjj H the store that never disappoints always does as it advertises and whose prices are never beaten. t;p.