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1915J pgglBER 10 1915 THE gUN pRicE UTAHEVERY friday PAGE THREK gftjU JIlTAH'Sl ' flies! Coal j ffB , I King, i Hiawatha, f I Black Hawk, 1 Panther. ii 1 111 11 SALES II i AdENCY I J 818 Kcarns Building :: Salt Lake City, Utah;; '. ; ! i J DH. E. F. CHAMHERLAIN l Physician nnd Surgeon. 're In VlRlliv-Iionomn llultdlnc ,1 lMlICi:, UTAH. j CLU'DE P. HAKER Attorncy-nt-Law , Helper State Hank lIulldlnK, Helper. Utah. .;! WILLIAM II. FKYE Attorney-at-Lnw JWJW IMtlCR, UTAH. II loom S, HIIvordI Illook. FRED'K E. WOODS Attorncy-nt-Lnw IMUCn. UTAH. '.oom 14 nnd IS Hllvnsni Uloek. !. A. McGEE i Attorncy-nt-Lnw J PRICK, UTAH. Ity f Vlulln-Honomo niock. In J FERDINAND ERICKSEN i Lawyer ou i T J iid bo Ilulldlwr. Bait Lake CJty. In. irti Ij nu S 8 """' A. Klnit Claudo I Kins " KING & KING 'frJ Attorneys to C ' mmerolat Illock, halt I-nko City. I DR. R. Q. GREEN "" Dentist . 5 ' 'te Hour 0 to 12 and 1 to 5, II C ' mi 1 and 5 VlRlla-Ilonomo Illdir, i DK. F. S. THOME tin JC Dentist " 'Pr Unnk IlulldliiK, Helper from ; ; 1 i to 20th oC each month. J ! ' DR. II. n. GOETZMANN J ! ' mvrisT ' ' hniirn 9 ii. in. to 5 p. in. Offlm I i hone 103; 11(4, I'liono 253M. ;; " i over Price Commercial Dunk, ;; Trice. Utah MILES E. MILLER, M.U.A.A. ;; Licensed Architect ; nt llulldlnir. Halt Utko Clt jj! I (UM GY ABSTRACT I COMPANY ! J W Hammond. Manager ; ', Vulrarta of Title Furnished "" i n I'lece or Traot In Kastern ", h 1 . i' Insurnneo Written In the xt Companies Dolntr Iluslnee ; ; tin State. Ileal Mutate. Honda, Oolduu Itule liullillnif. 1'rlec, Utah. DR. MARSHALL IS ! HELD FOR MURDER Former Resident of Green River Arrested In Kansas Charged With Shooting His Wife-Taken to Salt Lake. Dr. nnd Mrs. Marshall were known liy almost ccryono In this city, he having practiced medicine here last summer. Prior to that time they had resided south of Elgin for nwhlle, coming here for the benefit of Mrs. Marshall's health. The lady underwent an operation nt Salt Lake City, hut came home stronger than for some time nnd it was hoped that she would ultimately recover. Late In the summer they left here, returning to their former home in the Middle West. Mrs. Marshall corresponded with Mrs. L. II. Green of Elgin nnd only the day before the tragedy she wrote her a letter, seemingly in the best of spirits and not a hint of an distress was given. The late Mrs. Marshall was a fine young woman, of splen did cducntion and refinement. She was liked by all who knew her nnd it was with profound regret that the news of the sad occur rence wns received here. Local opinion seems to discredit the I suicide theory, most persons believing that It was an accident. The doctor nnd his wife seemed to be very devoted to each other and often went out walking, when they practiced target shooting. Green River Dispatch, Dec. !, 1015. SALT LAKE CITY, Dec. C "I just wanted to sec If Resale could shoot herself Hint way." This was the statement made by Dr. Herbert D. Marshall, the physician accused of the murder of 1 his wife nnd who shot himself in the back of the head Saturday 'while In jail nt Seneca, Kan., according to advices received here Ihi8t night. Dr. Marshall's wound is declared to be not serious. jThe bullet, it is stated, did not pierce the skull, but plowed nlong I the side of the head and wns removed two inches from the point of j entrance. After he shot himself, while In the jail at Seneca, Dr. Marshall ; wns removed to Snbetha, the city in which ho was arrested last Thursday when he arrived from Snlt Lake City with the body of his wife. He wns taken ta Snbetha hospital, where he remains I under guard. It was there that the attending physicians romoved the bullet and expressed the belief that he will be able to travol In two or three days nt the outside. He Is Willing to Return to Zlon. II. D. Lyon, who left Friday night to return with Dr. Marshall, arrived at Snbetha Saturday night and will assist In guarding his prisoner until the doctor is able to travel. A tnessago from dc tectlvc Lyon last night wns to the effect that Dr. Marshall was willing to return to Uenh without the formality of requisition papers. Dr. C. P. Harvlelle, assistant county physician of Snlt Ijtko county, who loft Saturday morning for Sabetha, arrived there yes terday evening In time to take an X-ray photograph of the head of Mrs. Marshall. It showed that the bullet which killed the accused physician's wifo entered the back of the head an inch nnd n half behind the right ear, passing directly forward, and is lodged in the brain substance near the forehead. Officials investigating the Marshall ease, Assistant County Attorneys A. V. Wntkins nnd Harold M. Stephens, nnd members of the police department, "took n day off" yesterday. They have worked for nearly a week gathering evidence ngalnst the nccused physician, nnd, ns one of the officials expressed it, "the evidence wo have yet to secure is of tho character that will not run nway, so wo feel that we are entitled to n breathing spell." However, it wns stated that the work of investigation will be resumed today, nnd it is believed that by the time Detective Lyon arrives with his prisoner, probably by Thursday or Friday, the chain of evidence ngalnst him will be such as will hold him for trial In tho district court on the charge which he now faces thnt of deliberately murdering his wife in their room nt n local hotel Sunday noon, November 28th. Dr. Marshall's Sister In the House. When Dr. Marshall shot himself Saturday afternoon, while in the sheriff's kitchen nt Seneca, ho used thnt officer's revolver. It is said that the previous evening Marshall, the sheriff and a Sab etha attorney had been in the room nnd thnt Dr. Marshall hnd used tho sheriff's revolver, illustrating how, in his opinion, Mrs. Mar shall had been accidentally shot.by dropping her revolver which slto was preparing to pack. The weapon returned to the cupboard wns not the one which Marshall used Saturday, but wns another revolver, which the sheriff kept in the cupboard. Mnrshall had previously been ncqunlnted with the sheriff nnd knew where the weapon wns kept. In another room nt tho time of the shooting wns Miss Doris Mnrshall, n sister, who is a stenographer in St. Louis, nnd who wns in Seneca visiting her brother. Investigation made by the officers nt Seneca and Sabetha re garding tho finnncial affairs of Dr. Marshall nnd his wife, shows thnt Mrs. Marshall's first husband, L. L. Hnggnrd, left five thous- , nnd dollars life insurance. It is stntcd that Mrs. Marshall did not in iter lifetime spend the principal nnd Mrs. Marshall's relatives ' declare that Dr. Marshall squandered it. Mrs. Marshall, it Is stated, carried two thousnnd life insurance, her aged mother being tho beneflcinry in the policy. CARNEGIE LIBRARY IS RECEIVING NEW MAGAZINES AND PERIODICALS Tho Carnegie public Hbrnry nt Price is now receiving regularly tho mngnzlnes nnd periodicals listed below. The list is a large one nnd well selected. The reading public enn, with profit, make reg ular visits to the library, If for no other purpose than the reading of these magazines. Tho library board has also placed an order for more than two hundred volumes which nro expected any day. In the list are suitable books for all ages, from tho child who Is just beginning to learn, to those mnturo in age. Each week more neoplo are visiting the library and tho volumes let to the public nro increasing. American Magalne Manunl Training Woman's Home Companion Ladies' Home Journal Ameiunn Roy OutlSSk American Cookery Scribner's Century World's Work Country Life In America North American Review Delineator Review of Reviews Evcrvbody'H St. Nicholas Harper's Magazine Survey Scientific American - Illustrated World Independent ' "I x Youths' Companion jjfe , House nnd Garden PROHIBITION IN COLORADO WINS statp M'imu-.mi: court mvi:s iMioitryr ui!isin. Crnt iiiilnl Mnti. nnd All tin CIHcn Tlirrrln IWtiitnp lry After tlio 1'liM of ilip Ycni-Cowrnnr C'itrlon Tt prowfH Ci(.n.i (Irntllmlc When He llenit of ilio l.nto-1 Itullnjt j IIKWMII. t'oto . Dee 6 The nu thorlU of Colorado to enact nnd en-1 fore klate wide prohibition Una up held in the Mate mipreme eourt to day in an unatilimmx opinion written by JuMlee W. II (labbert The rourt held that eltlen Kerned tinder tperlal rhaiter were without nuthorlt) to eonllmie tiafflt In IntoxIrMIn II tiunr after January I. 101ft. when i!nt wide prohibitum become effec tive In Colorado tinder constitutional nnd statutory nartineitt. Tin derlaion held that the enforce ment of prohibition rumen under the polln iorw of the etate and l In nu vny affected l.y tlie twentieth amend-' ment under whbh Denver nnd wcrnl I other i lllen In t'olorndn are Koverncdl by upeilal i harter It In uleo declared! that the lonetlluthinal and itatutory1 prohibition enactmrntM are clearl) I within the mwer or the people and i IcKl.lmure or the elate The opinion' look the ixwltl.iii -that If It had been Intended to exempt the rlt nnd count of Denver from the operation ! of piohlhltlnn Iawk. word to that ef-, feet would have lieen emploed The court ordered the lUenne l mied b Denver clt) nllthorltlea to! AURiint Koch to be canceled Jnuuar) I. 1918 Cluvernnr Cnrlxon cxprctmed Rrntlflintlon when Informed of the. court a riitlim None of the uttoriicvii for the llipior Intercut wna In court. I Mr Adrlann lluilKerford. prcnldcnl of I tho Mate Women' t'hrlMlun Temper-1 nnec union, exprowed her Krntlflca-1 lion and mid "The only HwHulunre kIvcii Attorne) I (leiu-ial Karinr wna l the Statu Wo men riirl.tUn Temperance union In emploiltiK oiuiiim-I to aid In prenent Iiik the ihw to the mipreme tourt , TRAFFIC MUCH DELAVED Trill II of Scvculitii ('ill Uoc Into Did h Near CuMllU. Thie.- mile wt of t'antllla Hprlmt lnt Honda) a train of eetiteeu car of o I wmm wietked. illlnit Ht MliM r and freight traffic In Imtti ill- let lion well Into Monday afternoon. althi'iiKh winkliiK trewa were ent out from Imth Hall lke I'lty Hind Helper Two of the conl car are now reputing In the Hpanlnh I'ork liver, while the remainder wcre'pleked up n bent the) iiiuld be what wiih left I of them CIIiih ('alio, h Mexluflii, wim eland- ( liiK near the truck and wna more or, lea Injured by helm; elrtirk with fl)-' Iiik wreckaKc. He wan taken to the Keiierul hiMpltnl nt I'nivo John j Joue wiih In iharKo of the train u I'otuliHliir nnd J II McArdle wii the 'CiiKlneer. The latter were not hurt They made a mttrrh for tramp nmonK tlie wrm'kaKe and found the Mexican. t'niler the direction Of the offlrlul of the road two hundred men were niMenibled from Helper and Halt Uike fit) to clear the truck.' The wriHl.ed neventeen cur hauled un nveruKe of forty ton of coal each, ull from the mine of Carbon and Miner) cnuntlc. iiiwembled for neiidiiiK vvvvt at Soldier Summit, where mull train urn iinuully made up. . . Tim Occident I mU to ho due to u defective wheel on one of the loaded , cur. The wreck I helmr InventlKnted h) company ofrieliil. It may later be a Niihjeit of InvevtlKiition by the ' IntcMtat" comnern cominlwilon Wll.l, COMMKXfi: 'IO hlllP j M.N(I.MSIC I'ltOM CISCO Charle Snell, iiiiiiiiikit of the Mc-' Cnrty Minim; company, vvn at Monh hut week KittliiK an outfit timi'llicr to lommence the mlnltiK uud ehlppliiK f maiiKanwe ore from ' the com J pmiV mine nt Hand Arron. ten mile MiiitlioHHt of Clwo and tnn mile north of Moah. AmHwIaled with Hneil In the niin pany ure V It. McCurty .' flreen Itlver. Hovernl (Irund Jumtlon bunl netM men and a firm of S'ew York ('ID (ihemut. It I the Intention to lominome the khlpmeiil of ori at otue iMlvr Knell hope to uhlp mm h u a car n day The company will not mil) cukouc In mlnliiir, but will buy inunKiuu mc and raruotlte ore. The) will p for the ore at Utah point delivered nt rallroud. Snell Mate the imnpnii) I fully flnnuted and I now lendv to mine, uhlp and buy ore. The compaii) I Huld to have oiiir of the lurKimt nnd rlehent iMidlim of Imninfanette ore In till rcKloli W. i lUnl MiCurty U well known In I'llce. belnK a brother-ln-luw of 8 C Mile lind C A Cltllwlt of till tltt Wll.li JOHN W. YIU'VII u.vrmt utaii roM'iics? WAHIIINOTO.N. U C. ! 6 In a upeilwl dlNutih rrom Now York, the WahlnKtoii l'ot of today "Col John W You nir. on uf l'rohlont llrlRhuin Ynumr, lute announced that he hu hecoine cHiniwlKn inaimitor of Utuh for the presidential boom that Senator Pu I'ont la about to launch Colonel Younit will have hi office at 71 llroad- way." It la doubtetl here that 4 iinator Du I'ont. who t T er 4 old. I n prenldmill'vl eaudldate 4 ' Mgtu U A. Mcfleo ha opened hei studio on North Ninth ttreet nnd It rad' to ihi:h ordetw or bIw leeeon. Advt. ' ' FOREIGN ADDITIONS TO POPULATION - 2422, BJEHBLBD IN NUMBER 9 Three thousnnd, three hundred nnd eighty-seven foreigners WM came to Utah during 1014 nntl 005 left the state, making tho total H actual acquisitions of foreign residents for thnt year 2-122. These 1 arc federal government figures, which came last Saturday to II. T. jH Haines, state commissioner of Immigration, labor and statistics. BJ The year 10M, computed by tho government in this report, flfil untied in June of Hint year, although the statistics are just coming off the presses in Washington, D. C. Thnt wns before the world war broke out, so that the next report of the kind from Washing- Hi ton will probably show n greater exodus than tho one just quoted. Hi Commissioner Hnlnes hnd requested thu head Immigration of- M flee of the government In Washington for this report. His Is thu lM first copy to be received here. Of tho :U187 foreigners who camo to 'HI Utah during the government's year lf)M, the Greek nation led in IH numbers. There were 787 Greeks, GU Northern Itnlinnrf, S83 !H Southern Italians, -Ktl from Great Hritnin, 237 Cretans nnd Slavs jH nnd the rest scattering. I Of thu 9G5 foreigners who departed the statu within thu same .H time, there were 453 Greeks, 109 Italians, 53 Englishmen nntl 09 HH Cretans nnd Slavs. 3 noifriniKii at iiici or llltNVHH AND SALT I.AKIC I DKNVKIt. Colo. Dei 1 Chtirle I lloettiher of Denver today wn elected iprenideul of the Denver nnd Halt l-nko ' railroad' to aucvecd Nevvmnn Krb of 1 New York, at u Npcclal meetlpK of the board of director. I.avrcnea C. I I'hlpp of Denver w ulionen chair I man of the hoard, MiicccedltiK the late ' Dr. I-" 8 IVumon of Uindoii. Other of flier eleited are W. K. Moive, Denver, vice ireldent and Kfiirrnl iniiniiKcr. re-elected. Ward II. I'camou, treaurer, l'red O. Moffatt, Denver, nnUtunt trnmurerj Clernld IIiikIh. Denver, aecrvtnr). Wllllum Wnddeii. New York. Vice president uud nltnit kotretary. j I'Kal blank nnd looio leaf device of every description. Tho Bun' place I of bunlnoM U the former location of I the Advocate, next to I'rlco pommer olnt nnd BuvIiibi bank. Malt order Klven prompt attention. Addre, The Hun, Trice. I'tali. Advt Kmoke i:ik I'rlde Clicur Tel 182 ADVICi: I'OU I'AltUHItH. ,H Utah farmer can m murli time, lH worr ii ml money by comuilllim drain- H one expert empo)ed by the Rovern- HH ment, uecordliiK to M. N. Hall of the iH Utuh bureuu of the tlrnlnune nervlce. H Accord I nic to Hull, the drnlnaKe ex- !H pert are nlwii) Kind to Inspect farm BH land upeclrd.of being affected by iCH nlknll. lly followlnir the recommen- ilH datlon of the drnlmiKe expert It I !l poMlhle for thu farmer to nave them- InH Helve coniildernblo lo In crop. flB owim Hint ;oi hicmTTT-TT HI :n.Miu:itui.'H TAin.irrs. Wk "1 owe my kooiI health ta Chamber- IH lulu' Tablet," write Mr. It. O. Keff. WM Crookatou, O "Two year nito I vva IH un Invnlld duo to itomauh trouble. I H took thrca bottle of thevo tablet nuif IH havu lur been In thn licit of health." H Obtainable everywhere Advt. flH The Sun ci.rrle a full and complete M lino of pencil. Ink, muullouo, pen, iBti blank book nnd office aupplle In H KCiicrnl Mall orders aollolted. Ad- H dree, Tho Bun, I'rlce, Utuh. Advt. SVf t rSaRSPPracticaI m Giving t 'M i PW"as to a Certain Ex- $ M k ittX (ent Taken i,,e p,ace J: fl ! IaIMh Silk of Useless Gifts. X Y tnSKsk Hosiery ? mm Y Ifyf&MMk 'imnnm umi 1 1 1- Y 11 X nv&SKw Pa'r P'n or blue & Wtm I (Oil Niagara Silk Hose would A ifflf Y 'wlira just add the correct finish iB Y 'fiJ'jSwi a Par rcs5' an(' V' lilH tfJO?WrY where would you find a t fiflfl Y hk-cJ, niorc acceptable gift at .. IH . 15 $1.50 n Y Maybe that a nice pair of Gloves is just the article that y llfll Y woufd bring the most plrasurc, price $1.25. Y tmM You will-have to hurry if that piece of fancy work is X h Jt4 finished for Christmas. X ISH Cordichet, all colors IQc. Plossclle, 2 skeins for Sc. 3B il Bessie Kennedy, Millinery, Inc. f m