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Show ? V. Rnt Qau ! , Job Pratiag Art Too a Subscribe? At living prices. Let us have your next order for anything you want print ed. Rich County News printing is synonymous with art and efficiency. If not please remember will your subscription help make this paper strong a thing necessary for an unsurpassed newt service. TWENTY-FIFT- H RANDOLPH, RICH COUNTY, UTAH, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1922. YEAR. LABOR IS DEALT Terrific 'explosion sylvania COLLIERY HEAVY ENTOMBS MANY WpRKERS Johnstown, 150 miners Pa., Between John B. UselessjtEsq. KEMALISTS DEMANDS CAUSE MUCH COMMENT IN LONDON; REQUESTS SURPRISING VOTE News From ConstanScarcity tinople Increase Uneasiness; Suspicion Attached to Nationlists London. Stunned by the heavy downfall of their candidates In the municipal elections throughout England Wednesday, the Laborites intensified their political campaign with the hope of making a better showing in the general election for parliament London. The surprising demands the Kemalists have made upon the allies in Constantinople since they took over the government cause a reat deal of anxiety in London. The feeling of uneasiness has been intensified toy the scarcity of news from Constantinople. All of the London newspapers treat the situation seriously and prominently. Deep suspicion of the aims of the Turkish Nationalists is almost unanimous among the papers, and all of them seem worried about the safety of the population at the Sublime Porte. A Times dispatheh from Constantin-pi- e dated Monday but not timed, said the situation had not become most critical and that the Angora government apparently was determined to take advantage of the confused political situation In Great Britain and by a series of accomplished facts quickly carry out the whole Nationalists program despite checks put upon them by the Mudania convention. The dispatches from Constantinople reported that there was much nervousness in responsible tallied quarters there, and that the European business men and other foreigners in the city were preparing to leave at a moments notice. Business is at a standstill and the unloading of ships has ceased, the dispatches said. The London newspapers, while asserting that the allies do not wish to interfere in any way with Turkeys Internal affairs, call for strict adherence to .the Mudania armistice terms and appeal to the allies .. to stand firm of Prevalent Political Attitude; London is Hostile to Working Party 100 and no chance of being rescued alive, following a terrific gas explosion at 7 :45 oclock Monday morning, in the number one mine Of the Reilly Coal company at Spangler, Pa., 25 miles north of here. Word from the company officials received just before noon said the mine was still filled with gas and it was impossible to send rescue crews down below. Tons of debris block the shaft 500 feet from the entrance and the entombed men are behind this barrier with all air cut off. Lack of air alone will kill the men In a short time experts say. Before noon the air fans were re paired and are again operating but this affords scarcely any hope that any of the entombed men will be taken out alive. By noon a thousand miners from nearby points had reached the mine, they are equipped with gas masks and at noon they began digging furiously at the tons of debris tumbled dow,n by the great explosioy Because the mine is still filled with gas, the rescuers are permitted to remain down but a few minutes at a , time. The shaft is hhlf a mile deep and the scene of the disasteris about half a mile back from the bottom of the shaft. There is but one entrance to , the mine. , , , How'seTirffie'dTTrobStfucTTon Js,' behind which the miners are trapped, has not been ascertained. Word of the disaster spread through eut' Cambria county 'and other see tions with great rapidity and telephone advices said that the workers are rushing to the mine and relay crews are making an effort to rescue the entoihbed men whether dead or " 1 - alive. ' The explosion occurred in a shaft, about 50 feet from the entrance. The men are entrapped behind tons of debris and it may be days before they are reached. At 10 oclock gas in' the shaft was still so dense that it was impossible tor send in rescue parties. With the air fans demolished there is no way of getting the men out at present and any attempt to enter would mean quick death to all who attempted it. A few minutes after the disastei the entrance to the mine was surrounded with hundreds of wives and children of the men down below. were desperate as the word was flashed about that there was not one chance In a" million that any of the men could be rescued alive. Some oi the women had to be retained b; others. Wo-me- Allied Troops Must Remain Constantinople. The Turkish Nationalist government has handed 8 note to the Allied high commissioner here stating that the warships of al nations must ask it for authorizatior to pass the straits of the Dardanelles the Havas correspondent here has been informed. They must also salute the new government of Turkey. As a result of the new situation created in Constantinople by the demand of Rafel Pasha, that the allied military occupation of the city cease, the peace conference called to be held at Lausanne. Nov. 13, has been postponed, possibly for a fortnight, it was announced here Monday. In Wednesdays balloting the Laborites lost 149 seats which they had previously held In London and about 160 seats which they had occupied in 80 boroughs outside the capital for the most part in such large cities as Manchester, Liverpool, Birmingham, Derby, Nottingham, Plymouth, , Southhampton and Portsmouth. considered Although nominally purely municipal issaes, the local contests some times are an indexto existing poitical feeling. This time the races were watched with intense curiosity as a possible forecast of labors chances in the coming general election. The outcome of ue local elections has certainly made Labors prospect fr parliament very discouraging. In some instances Laborite representation was completely wiped out In the municipal elections, but at other polls Labor held its own and even made a few gains. London was intensely hostile to Labor. The general feeling in the capital was manifested by the way the voters flocked to the polls despite the raw wind and furious rain. The partisan interest for and against Labor is a little stronger to . daythaq ihq. attention .focussed or the wrangle between the Lloyd Georgian Liberals and tlie Conservatives. The political writers . really do not seem to know what Is going on behind the scenes. Some of them say Sir George Younger has won his fight and that Lloyd George has decided to abandon his idea of spreading the war against the conservative. Others declare just as emphatically that the fallen premier has taken a very determined attitude and has decided to nominate additional candidates against Conservatives. On the whole, however, the general tendency is toward the belief that the Lloyd George threat of reprjsals will not be carried , out Some observers profess to see a renewal of harmony between Lloyd George and his former colleagues In the statement made Wednesday by Sir Rbert S. Horne, wo although he was one of the most faithful followers of the little Welshman, informed a Glasglow audience he was still a Unionist, and that if elected he would sit on the Unionist side of the house and give his general' support to Prime Minister Bonar Law. The Illness of Lloyd George attracts much attention. His cold and throat trouble is said by some to really be n symptom of rundown health due to fatigue. That he is tired was obvious to those- - who saw him during hia recent visit to Scotland. Beets Will Bring Nice Price Albion, Idaho. Sugar is selling at a price that assures the farmers on tlie Minidoka project $7.25 or better per ton for their beets. This advance will add thousands of dolllars to the income of the farmers. At the present time less than 50 per cent of the beet crop is harvested, but the Increase in price will stimulate growers to make special efforts to get them dug before a freeze. Angered People Sleze Coal Scranton, Pa. Angered by the failure of the federal and state fuel commissions to furnish them coal, more than 2000 citizens of Olyphant, near here, marched to the yards of the Delaware & Hudson 'Railroad company Sunday and confiscated four cars of coal. The fuel was loaded into automobile trucks and wagons and hauled to the nine churches and ten public schools in tho borough. Thousands Raid Coal Cars Olyphant, Pa. Ten thousand citl zens of this borough, led by borough officials, policemen, firemen, members of the city council and board of education with the benediction of Father P. J. Murphy, beloved white-hairepriest, known as the savior of the valley, mined 200 tons of coal for the churches and schools early Sunday. The mining was done from loaded cars which were ready to be shipped O. S. L. to Build More Railways away by the Hudson Coal Company Poratello. It is expected that con.while local demands of every sort re tracts will be let this month for three malned unsatisfied. etxenslons of the double tracking on the O. S. L. which has been started Portuguese Cabinet Quits between King, Hill and Medbury. The Lisbon. The Portuguese cabinet contracts let last summer were from Saturday night at the conclusion Hill to Hammett, the Medbury of the sitting of the chamber of King extension to be build later. deputies. d which Nov. 15. ' d ' Local Balloting Regarded as Index to Is are entombed with almost NewsAllNotes Parts of From UTAH 10 GENERAL ELECTION NOVEMBER FIFTEENTH WILL SEE in Penn- Fear Expressed That a Entire Crew Dead; Thousand Men are Engaged in Rescue Work; Deadly Gas X - Hinders Aid tc D NUMBER 52. TURKISH SULTANATE MB KAISER h IS TURKISH SULTAN IS DEPOSED BY SECRECY AND MYSTERY NATIONAL ASSEMBLY AT .TA1NED AT WEDDING CONSTANTINOPLE EMPEROR MAIN O7 OF DOORN 1 Government Remains Keystone Caliphate; Populace Celebrate the Change in the Selection of a Ruler of Sister Constantinople, The Angora assembly Thursday night decided unanimously that it is invested with sovereign rights and that the Turkish Nationalist government is the keystone of the caliphate and Friday the newspapers carried these headlines : Ottoman empire collapsed. In Us place there has arisen new national Turkish state Sultanate abolished. The- -' Sssefnblys-'ttecisl- wr nounced by a salute of 101 guns. Immediately the soldiers and civilians began to celebrate to the blare of military bands ahd the bright flarers of torch bearers. Tv.o resolutions were unanimously adopted by the assembly. The first said that by virtue of organic statute and representation, sovereign rights had been vested in an inalienable and indivisible manner in the Angora assembly, which was the only emanation of the nation. The second resolution declared the caliphate was vested in the imperial family of the Osman dynasty, but that the Turkish government remains the keystone of the cal' iphate. The selection of the caliphs is to be made by the grand national assembly of Turkey which will choose that member of the imperial family who is the best instructed, the best educated, the' most honest and the wisest. The palace of the sublime porte, having through Corrupt ignorance for several centuries provoked numerous ills for the' country (has passed into the domain of history. Recently the Turkish nation, the real mistress of its destinies, the founder of tlie Ottoman empire, revolted against its foreign enemies In Anatolia and undertook a struggle against the palace of the sublime porte, which took sides with its enemies and against the nation, and to that end it constituted the grrand national assembly of Turkey, its government and Its army threw itself Into the struggle against the enemies from without and against the palace of the sublime porte. Article I of this statute stipulates that the sovereignty of the sultan is assumed by the nation. By article H excecutive and legislative powers are conferred upon the nation. Article VII invests the body of the nation with sovereign rights such as the right to declare war and conclude peace. (These were formerly prerogatives of the sultan.) Since then the Ottoman empire has collapsed and in its place the new national Turkish state Is called Into being. Likewise, since the abolition of the Sultanate the grand national assembly of Turkey has taken Its place ; that Is to say, the government of Constantinople, its existence being no longer supported by any national force, has ceased to exist and no longer constitutes a vital organism. The true mass of the people of the nation have instituted an administra tive government of the people defend ing the rights of the true mass of the people and the peasants guaranteeing their welfare. k ef Bride Passes Self Off As Hermione in Order to Put Public Off Guard; Two ' ii Ceremonies Held .4 Doorn,- - Holland. The former German emperor, once of the empire, and Princess Hermione of Reuss Were married Sunday at the house of Dorn, where the lord abides in exile. This second venture was In strange contrast with that day in 1881 when, as crown prince, he wedded Augusta Victoria, daughter of Grand Duke of Schleswig-Holstei. Ther j wef s two- ceremonies, a civil - - helm II and Hermione Reuss, as they iffixej their names; the second a religions ceremony conducted by the former court chaplain, Dr. Vogel, according to the Lutheran rights. The air of secrecy surrounding the entire affair has been well maintained throughout. The climax of the systematic mystification ndopted by the Princess Ida, who resembles her, successfully passed herself - off as the bride at the Amersfioort station Saturday with an array of castle cars, whereas Prinhess Hermione left the train at Apeldoorn, half an hour earlier, and drove to the castle unobserved, those within the village making much of this as a huge joke. At the religious ceremony, which began with the singing of the Lutheran Jesus Geh Voran, Pastor hymn, Vogel preached from the text, Now Abideth Faith, Hope and Charity. The bridal couple occupied carved gilt armchairs surmounted by crowns, while the numerous guests were seated in rows behind them. Now the joyful day has arrived," when his declaimed the minister, majesty and her serene highness join hands. He recalled that the same text had served at the golden wedding of Wil-lia-n I and at the bridgegroom's own silver wedding. The bride, said he, has left fatherland and friends to unite her life with that of his majesty, whose faith has sustained him in circumstances which would have driven others to despair. As an evidence of faith, he pointed out that the kaiser conducted religious services on every Lords day in his home. He paid tribute to the virtues of the late empress and Princess Hermiones former husband, referring to the kaiserin as the ideal of German womanhood. Love each other as God loves you, he admonished, and you shall prevail over all evil report. Then followed the reading of the marriage service. Rings were exchanged, and the hymns, So Nimm Den Maine Ilaende and Harre Mein Seel, were rendered. A brief official communication issued later announced tlie civil and religious solemnities and mentioned the number of guests as twenty-eighPrince Henry of Prussia, as senior member of the family, spoke a few cordial words, to which there was no response, according to the German custom, and no further speeches. Tlie day began clear and bright Hohenzollern weather but soon turned to showery, and a chilly rain fell when the former emperor's motor car drove from the castle to the lodge at the appointed time for the civil ceremony. t. mands. The opinion that the Lausanne peace conference must be postponed as the result of recent developments in the Near East is becoming general. But a Reuter's dispatch reports that the Kemalist delegation to the conference has already started for Lausanne. North Salt Lake. Sale of 4000 head of cattle, the heaviest run of strictly prime beef cattle, and a sharp demand fur feeder and fat sheep, were salient features of the banner month's at the North Salt Lake stock-yardOctober, 1922, marks the most successful period since the establishment of the local yards. Moab Discovery of oil near Ship-rocN. M., has stimulated interest in the possibilities for production from the Cretaceous horizons in the mountain states south of Wyoming and to some degree has offset the gloom occasioned by the barrenness of the test of rocks of that age last year near Huntington.- - Lynndyl The state board of health issued an order, and called on the county commissioners of Millard county in enoforcing it, requiring the muzzling for the confinement of all dogs in that portion of the county bounded on' the north and east by the county boudjfries and on the south west by lines running five miles from the town of Lynndyl, and including that municipality within the area. Construction work has Pay son. been ordered by the state, road commission to be stopped for the winter on tlie Payson-Spanis- li Fork highway, tlie cold weatlier not being conducive to the best results. (Surveying parties working in Sanpete county on the pending adjudication suit of the Sevier river have been stopped at least temporarily by the heavy storms recently. Ogden. An inspection of the new raivvay mail terminal at the Union station has been made by Second Asst. Postmaster General Paul nenderson, Salt Lake City, end W. E. Trim, superintendent of railway adjustments. "hTti. mnrrt for. hjfor m Salt Lake City to an extent that a serious shortage of nearly all classes of labor exists, sa.vs the monthly review of tlie United States employment bureau. TTfiTT&iTTiK Duchesne. citizens of Duchesne and the populace of tlie entire Uinta n basin did not received their unn, for Denies Communists Review several days on account of snow. Tlie Associate Justice Washington. Castle road, Sutherland Tuesday denied the applica- that was by tlie government, accepted 17 and Bross Lloyd tion of William with the that tlie state other members of the communist labor maintain understanding the highways, is the chief would which error a of writ for party source of trouble. State authorities bring to the supreme court for review have promised to do what they could their conviction in Illinois on the in the matter. charge of conspirarcy to violate the state sedition Act of 1912. Salt Lake City. The champion big red apple of the year so far brought Utah to Receive Trout Eggs here. The specimen, of tlie Rome Salt Lake. Arrangements with the Bauty variety, weighs 2014 ounces. It a state of Washington under which is 15 inches in circumference on its quarter of million eyed silver trout longest diameter, which is 5 inches eggs would be given the state were an- long. Standing on the blossom end nounced by the Utah fish and game the apple rises above the table to a department Tuesday. The eggs will height of 4 inches. be hatched and the fry grown to a Fillmore Millard county has adoptfingerling size when they will be taken to the high altitudes for planting in ed the slogan and the program that small lakes. The receipt of these corn will feed pigs, and tlie pigs vv 111 trout will mark the Introduction to pay for the cows, Utah of a new species of trout, acfish State Road Commissim of Utah cording, to D. H. Madsen, state will receive bids for construction of and game commissioner. highway in Morgan County between Herrin Massacre Trial Now On Morgan and Peterson. Marion, 111. The Herrin massacre Salt Lake City. In a daring daytrial begun here Wednesday. Eight light robbery a lone bandit held up men who have been held In jail will be tried. They are Bert a telephone company girl cashier and a chauffeur in front of the Hyland Grace, Otis Clark, Philip Fontanetta, Peter Hill, Oscar Howard Jesse Child- exchange. Eighth East and Chase avenue, and escaped with a payroll totalers. Four hundred and twenty-fou- r more indictments were returned by ing $1344 in currency and ear tickets. the grand jury, 205 for murder, 116 Price. Another drop in tlie price for conspiracy and 103 for assault to of gasoline is announced in the retail commit murder. The trial is expected price of gasoline in the Utah-ldahweeks totake up district is to be 23 cents a gallon. This drop of 2 cents is the third cut Attempt on, Life of Politician that hus been made this month. With in connection this Chicago. Violence drop gasoline Is lower than it with the election broke out early Tues- has been for five years. day In Chicago when J. H. Clancy Ogden. Utah has greater undevela Republican precinct worker In the eighteenth ward, was fired on as he oped opportunities than any state In was leaving his home. None of the the union, according to the statement shots took effect and the attackers of Mathew Hale, president of the escaped in a motor car from which South Atlantic Maritime coroporation, with headquarters In Washington, who three men fired several shots. recently made a trip to the scenic Mob spots in southern Utah, in writing to From Rescued Diplomat Rome. Count Sforza, Italian ambas- R. H. Rutledge, district forester. sador to France, was the object of a Lynndle Fourteen head of cattle, hostile demonstration by Fascist! have been victims of rabies recently. when he arrived at Bussoleno, in the Salt Lake City The reduction la province of Turin, on the Italian fron federal taxes in the collection die a tier, while returning to Rome for trict of Utah, effective for the cor Musolini. The Fascisti detached the rent year, reaches the sum of $3,619, was count in which the riding 590.80, according to a special survey, carriage from the train, but carabineers rushed of the cancellations and decreases la In and rescued him. tax receipts provided by the revenue act of 1921. wlth-outba- o |