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The Salt Lake Herald-Republican from Salt Lake City, Utah • Page 9

Location:
Salt Lake City, Utah
Issue Date:
Page:
9
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THE HERALDREPUBLICAN SALT LAKE CITY UTAH SATURDAY MAY 14r 1910 6 CRYSTAIDOMINO SUGAR I I AL i L1 Or 1 A Leyson Sale I This time its 136 Karnak I I brass Jardinieres of Exquisite aan design at200 275 3 75 and 450 each and 55 Candlesticks also in Egyptian design at 150 225 and 450 each This line of Brass is different from all others and the price at which we offer the line puts the most artistic flower pots either hanging or standing and candlesticks on the market within I the reach of all The sale is now Phone 65 for the correct JEWELERS time ALT LAKECITY 1 JUSTICE TO YOURSELF Anyone who suffers from any physical ailment any trouble of the body should i leave no stone unturned in lt4 ar1 wry their efforts to receive help 1 1 J1 5 and cures fi The mind and body are too StL VS a rz closely related for one to leave unfinished the work of a finding out WHO can bestS ry cure his or her particular ailment If the body is ill the brain I 6 will be correspondingly depressed iiar vy and the outlook blue gw Therefore you cannot afford to be indifferent to an offer of assistance so honest and 4 4N rs fair as Mrs Pickard here gives you The sciende of Chiropractic is that of adjusting the physi that it works a rl A cal machinery so according to Natures will or Sarl 4 as Nature originally ordained i before that part or those parts 3 ca axw became displacedb for a 4 4ivy04 something interfered with the ya 4t4z workings of the physical machine xV 3 Mrs Pickard offers you free consultation She will tell you whether Chiropractic cant Pr help and cure you I costs you nothing to investigate a 4 If you are handicapped by stomach liver kIdney troubles sciatica rheumatism female and nervous troubles at least investigate Investi gate gateM 217218 Herald Bldg 1 rs IC ar Hours 9 to 122 to 5 Buy Your Groceries at the I i Peoples Cash Dept Store Best Brands Lowest Cash Prices Straight Grade Flour 9141 Manon qt Jar Preserves SOc HlKh Patent Flour S15O 1 sal Woods Cross Toinato Cat 10 ll Graham Flour 30c Blip 35c II I I 5 lbs Rice for 25e Fineit quality Potato per I 3 i Kga Cream Wheat 15c bushel SOc Raining and Currants lb lOc lbs Dean 2Rc 3 can Tomatoes 5c Tt lbs Sago 25e Honey per Ib lOe it cans Baby Cream 23c Blackberries Cherries PeachesV 3 can Corn 25c Greengages can 15c 3 large cans Cream ZSc Fresh Fruit Vegetables Candles Every Dar Popular Prices Phone Orders Inil 1210 Dell 3539 Goods Delhered 42 to 48 West First South Big moonlight dance at Murray tonight Prize waltzing prize drawing i SPECIAL THIS WEEK 36Inch FibreCov ered Trunks Brass Trimmed Sole Leather Strapped 2 Trays etc Worth 2500 Only 1595 uy from the Maker 54 Main St i I I I Beware of the Bread Without a Label The baker of that bread knows it is not up to the standard in quality freshness nor weight He is ashamed to label his loaf His loaf is an IMITATION I I I 1 I of Royal Table Queen He i is trading on the advertising and popularity of Table Queen Buy Bread That Bears This Label ct JUti CoIf If the loaf does not show the groove of the Mueller Patent Bread Pan and the label of Royal Table Queen Bread do not buy it Table Queen always has the labelis always freshest and biggest All Grocers5c i I i I No BetterI I I Time Than i NOW To buy wearing apparel for men women and children GOING OUT OF BUSINESS Everything in the house selling at less than SOc on the Dollar The I BARON i Co 254256 State Street Dont Drop Your Watch This may be good advice but it doesnt keep you from dropping the watch and then what If you want that question answered right let us answer it d7tf liJ 7 JEWELERS 59 Third So St QeoWEbertCo have moved their big line of Wall Paper Pictures and Picture Framing to 41 Main Street 1Nl nIf De owt Iariit DUN COG JtGJII BUST 0al1l va lUb8 4 tDlfUu lab lhdlii LaB 4 Good Books Make People i Better The habit of reading good books should be culivated Children should be given good books and encouraged to read them We have hundreds of books written especially for boys and girlsen tertaining and Instruc tiveOur Our prices are always within moderate bounds always as low as consistent Deseret SS Union Book Store 44 East South Temple Mall order Mont every filled Rood book name day an that published received TRIB A guaranteed cure for the Liquor and Tobacco Habit Price 1250 SchrmmJohcson Drugs The Never Substitutors Five Store Where the Cars Stop BORRMAN WEALTH DISPUTED MATTER Income of Liquor Man Variously Given inDivorce Pro ceeciings FIVE KNOTS ARE UNTIED JUDGE MORSE HEARS MANY CASES OF DOMESTIC WOE Five decrees of divorce were granted yesterday by Judge Morse Several orders in cases now pending were also made Unusual interest centered around the case of Theodora Bdrrjnan against Herman Borrman both of whom testified The merits of the case were not entered into but the matter of temporary I alimony and attorneys were taken up Mrs Borrman was allowed iuu a month for her support during the pendency of the suit and 50 to be used In the preparation of papers In I her case Judge Morse continued the 1 order restraining Borrman from disposing I of his property In any way while the suit is pending and the court also I enjoined the defendant trom interfering in any manner whatever with the I plaintiff Mrs Borrman was accompanied by I several women friends She testified i that of the 5000 given her by her i husband ih settlement of their former divorce about four years ago she had loaned him 2000 She also testified that she had debts to the amount of 170 for wearing apparel Mrs Borr man further testified that her husband Is worth 10000 and that his income is from 10000 to 1000 a year In the matter of Mr Borrmans wealth and income there was a wide discrepancy He followed Mrs Borr man on the witness stand and testified that he owned all the stock in the Germania Liquor company and was local agent for the Val Blatz Brewing company He said his property holdings and total assets would not exceed 17000 and that his income was but little over 300 a month Other Divorce Cases I In the case of Annie Sturgis against William Sturgis the plaintiff was allowed 20 a month temporary alimony and 25 attorneys fees An interlocutory decree of divorce was granted in the case of Orina Leslie against James Leslie Habitual drunkenness was the charge They were married in Salt Lake August 10 1891 They have three children the custody of whom was awarded the plaintiff She was allowed 25 a month permanent alimony and 50 attorneys fees May Burt was divorced from Alexander Burt and allowed HO a month permanent alimony and 75 attorneys feet She was also given the custody of three minor children They were i married in Salt Lake November 16 1S93 Nonsupport cruelty and drunkenness were the grounds upon which the Interlocutory decree was granted On the grounds of desertion Ida Parson was freed from Elisha Parson They were married in Salt Lake August 27 1898 Carl Jenson who was married to May Jensen in Princeton Minn November 15 1901 was granted a decree on the grounds of desertion Peter Gallagher proved to the satIsfaction of the court that he had been abandoned by his wife Caroline Gallagher whom he married in Wai pole April 30 1898 and was creelof ginterlocutory granted a decree of the interlocutory kind Husband Deny Cruelty In the divorce case of Nellie Himes against Charles Himes the defendant yesterday filed an answer and crossbill to the plaintiffs complaint Himes denies nearly all his wifes allegations dIn which she recited a woeful state of domestic affairs in the Himes family He denies that he was ever cruel or abused his wife On the other hand he asserts that she made it a daily practice of calling him vile and obscene names They were maddied In Salt Lake August 19 1904 Himes says he is a mechanic capable of earning ie a day An answer and crossbill was Also filed by the defendant In the case of Anne Hamilton against William Hamilton He also sets up a general denial of his wifes complaint that he abused and assaulted her that he called her vile names and accused her of Infidelity Hamilton contends in his crosscomplaint that he Is the abused party and that his wife even went so far as to assault him He says he has been a good husbandand a good provider An order was made by Judge Morse allowing the plaintiff 1 a month temporary alimony and 2 attorneys fees SEEK MISSING HEIR TO LARISH ESTATE Judge Lewis yesterday made an order of sale in the estate of Jacob Larish deceased The property in the estate consists of a house and lot of the estimated value of 2000 Larish died in Salt Lake in 1892 His only known relative is a sister Juliana Larish She returned to Germany several years before his death For eighteen years Andrew Gebhardt the administrator has been searching for the missing heir but has not been able to locate her In the event that ai heir does not enter a claim the property will revert to the state SILVER KING LITIGATION EngineerL Burton Testifies for the Plaintiffs Yesterdays hearing before Special Examiner Christy in the suit of the Silver King Consolidated Mining company against the Silver King Coalition Mines company was very brief and only one witness was examined This was Burton engineer for the plaintiff company who was crossex amined by DIckson chief counsel for the Kearns company The witness was taken over the ground already covered by Frank Anderson regarding the survey of the Parsons stope but nothing of a startling nature was brought outThe hearing will be resumed this morning when Frank Anderson will be recalled After his testimony has been concluded the attorneys for the defense will place Engineer Brooks on the stand to try to refute the testimony given by Anderson and Burton TIEUXAA XOT GUIITY A verdict of not guilty was returned by the jury In the case of Bert Tier nan who was tried In Judge Lewis division of the district court on a charge of alleged criminal assault upon Sadie Linberg seven years of age February IS last The jury was out only a short time before arriving at the verdict Exchange used things for used things through a classified ad getting I the needed for the unneeded artl HANSON TRIES TO PROVE AN ALIBI Former Postmaster Testifies in Own Behalf Admitting He Was Disguised GIRL IMPORTANT WITNESS SAYS SHE SAW DEFENDANT DURING TIRE In the trial of Frank Hanson former postmaster of Fillmore on the charge of having burned and looted the post office there the prosecution conducted I I by Colonel Booth United States atetorney announced yesterday that the governments case was finished After a brief statement of what the defense expected to prove Attorney Marioneaux chief counsel for the da fense put Frank Hanson on the witness stand Hanson endeavored to account for his whereabouts from early Sunday morning September 6 1908 to the following night including the time when the postoffice was burned and robbed Defendant contradicted prac tically every statement made by half a dozen witnesses for the government When the morning session opened John Kelly postmaster at Fillmore was recalled to testify Postmaster Kelly admitted that anyone could project a pair of tweezers into the letter box in the postoffice and extract letters there from Lee Baker of Fillmore testified that he was at the fire when the poslofflce was burned He admitted on crossex amination that he had been convicted in the Fillmore courts of selling liquor to Indians for which offense he was fined 50 Peter Beauregard testified that the room in which the letters stolen from the Fillmore postoffice were found was that of Frank Hanson Ira Warner was recalled by the prosecution and repeated the conversation which he said occurred between himself and defendant the night of the fire Warner said that while the fire was blazing Hanson came up to him apparently very excited and said Ive been in bed for hours you know when I went home The next night the witness said Hanson met him again in he made the same remark without my solicitation on the part of Warner Girl Saw Defendant Miss Alma Greenwood testified that she had seen Hanson emerge from a lane between the buildings across the street from the postoffice while the fire was burning She said Hanson came over to her She added that Hanson told her he was in bed when he heard the bell ringing and he smelt smoke so he arose and dressed and went down to the fire Hans Hansen assistant cashier of the State Bank of Millard county and Kufus Day cashier of the same bank identified letters produced by the prosecution as having been found in Frank I Hansons room as bank statements sent to persons in Holden and ScIpio United States Attorney Sooth then asked permission to Introduce us evi dence the letter from Miss Hazel Beauregard mailed the afternoon be fore the fire and the letters sent out by the bank It was evident from the exceptions taken by the defense that I that side hoped to make a strong point of the fact that the letters were found in Hansons room and not in his pock its etsJudge Marshall announced that while the jury should not convict upon the single circumstance that the letters were found in Hansons room the jury i should give due weight to the circum stance The government then rested its side of the case and Frank Hanson was called to take the stand by the defense He said he was 37 years old and had been a resident of Fillmore all his life His father was living al though he was decrepit with age His mother was dead On September 6 1908 Hanson said he attended the races near Fillmore in the afternoon and returned to town along toward dusk It had been cloudy that after nbon and It had sprinkled a little and witness light suit and straw hat had become wet He went straight home I and prepared his fathers supper and I changing his clothes had put on a I black suit and a soft hat and went I downtown He said he went to the Huntsman hotel where he got some mail he had left there Then he went Into a cigar store purchased a cigar talked to a I few people and went out on the street This was about 1030 As he I emerged from the drug store he spoke to two young men and a moment afterwards I Ira Warner followed him and said he would walk down the street with him The Warner boy said It was a good night for eavesdropping In the park saying that one might see some funny things Hanson said he did not care for that kind of business whereupon Warner asked him to go and see some of his chums to which the de fendant demurred Warner insisted and Hanson said Well Ill pull up my coat collar and pull down my hat and walk past and see if the boys know me Witness said he did this which accounted for the alleged disguise charged against him Warner afterward I said according to the testimony of the defendant that the young people I in the crowd recognized Hanson as he passed notwithstanding his attempt II at disguise vti ny aid you disguise yourself at all asked Attorney Marloneaux Just for amusement just for the fun of the thing replied Hanson Attempts to Prove Alibi Hanson further testified in support of his attempt to build up an alibi that he went home about 1040 oclock He described in detail the route taken between town and his residence which was about six blocks distant As he I approached his home he met his brother John and the two entered the house I together He said he sat on the bed talking to his brother for an hour and after his brother left he read a magazine Pretty soon If heard the fire bell ringing and he went uptown to see where the fire was Hanson denied having any conversation with Miss Greenwood or with Winnie Trimble and denied that he saw Ira Warner after the fire About a month after they I i fire Hanson came to Salt Lake where I he stayed until the conclusion of the I political campaign which was then going I on After the noon recess Hanson was again placed on the stand He was put under a rigid crossexamination by United States Attorney Booth The defendant spoke in a loud voice all through his quizzing and at times became very excitable He was Inclined to repeat matters that Colonel Booths questions did not call for and Judge Marshall had to caution him to answer the questions and nothing more Colonel Booth took Hanson over the events of the day of the fire in the postoffice The majority of the questions were answered with a readiness that was most astonishing and in some cases the defendant gave his answer before the prosecuting attorney had finished the question At other times the defendants replies were long drawn out and evasive When he was asked If it was not a fact that he wore a mustache before the day of the fire and that he had it shaved off shortly after Hanson replied that he did not know AGED MAN INSISTS HE IS NOT AN INCOMPETENT Argument was heard by the supreme court yesterday in the matter of the appeal of John Manning 85 years old who was adjudged an incompetent by the lower court The contention of the defense was that tho lower court erred In not making a finding of facts and conclusions of law Manning has a small amount of property The appealed case of the West Mountain Lime Stone company against George Danley et aL was also argued and submitted.

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About The Salt Lake Herald-Republican Archive

Pages Available:
87,281
Years Available:
1906-1920