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Show TRB JORDAN JOURNAL. JIIDVALB. UTAR HDl L. . lllllU lffALIANS REACH HIT BY GOVERNOR DEBT AGREEMENT GOVERNOR TI!LLS SECRETARY Of' GROSS VIOLATION UNDER ,RESENT PERMIT SYSTEM BOTH COM ..tSSIONS SIGN FINAL AGREEMPIT FOR LARGE WAR DEBT f.UNDING ORDER IS GIVEN TO COMPLETE DAM TO UTMOST CAPACITY; MUCH LAND AFFECTED Alcohol Makere Are Worse Than Brewerlq He Declarel; Aska For Conference On Prohibition 8pject lnte.-..t Chargee And Annual Paymenta Will Be Operated On Upward Scale; Both Sides Are Satlafled Increased Size Of Dam Will Meall Saving To Water Uaers, As Well As Water A Muc:1 Larger Territory • Harriaburg. h.-Asking that action be taken to •end gross violation" of the ~w by holders of federal alcohol permits, Governor. Plnchot in a lett.- t.o ijecretary of the Treasury J(ellon bas saggested· a personal con· ference with the secretary on the qu.eation of prohibition enforcement. The governor's letters, written at· tt~r conferences here with state pollee beads, prohibition enforcement agents ud Majoz- William G. Murdock, Phil· adelphia, of the federal enfor~me.nt administration, was In reply to Secretary Mellon's promise 1B a letter dat· ed November f of close co-operation with the Pennsylvania state author!· tfes In the control of breweries. .After thanldng the secretary for his aasurances that federal permits would be withheld lrom breweries that have been operating unlawfully Governor Plnchot declared that the 'f'iolation of the law In the denatured ucohol field had been more Ticlous and tar more Important than the breweries. He asked that action be take.n to pat a stop to these "gr088 violations," and offered the assistance ot the state pollee In doing so. The IOTernor said he was prepared to ~er the detailll of more than a hund.rei such Tiolatlons. He said lllegal diversions ot alcohol was possible "mainly because government regula· Uou allow the d!.stllleries to ship their prod11cts to a denaturtaa pl&Dt at a distance." "It Is not necessary," aatd the governor's letter, ''to discuss mistaken statements In your letter further than to point out the present replatlons do not forbid putting strong beer Into racking machines; that no permit I can trace has ever been revoked In PennsylTanla for putting 8trong beer Into racldng machines, barrels or bottles, and that the state police haTe not actually been given the right to Inspect breweries at any ti~e, as your letter aasures me they have. Several ~ya after the date of It they were fused admission to a number ot per· t holding breweries. I aaaume thfa be corrected at once." itlng a number of specific cases which be declared that violation federal alcohol permits were made ai11le, Governor Pincbot's letter d: Trove/. With A.,oniJainw Speed MD••*' IPet!d I Patterso-. tbe Australian tenplayer, kDCJICkecl out .Jean Borotra, "'loundlnc Basque," with a tennla at the DAvill cnp eliminatlo4 ~b• at Germantown, Pa., he startliOmethtnr for the mathematlcbma. come a tennla ball can !mock out, th417 wanted to lmow. tbey got their pencUs and paper b:r devlwa methods, myaterloua to of ua, got an amazing reeult. Jflliaen a giant like Patleraon hits a ball wltb hll racquet It travels terrUlc speed of 120 teet a teeIf this could be maintained It flllcltii'Bvel 82 miles an hour 1 satlslled with that, the sclenwent further and found that a ball, when hlt by a player like or Bobby Jones, Jr., makes an t011aotllle look like a piker. golf ball speeds at the rate of ':wl~en teet a aecolld I · wise woman Is one who bas a deSl to SllJ and remains anent. "The final decision as to these pert& was not made In Philadelphia bbt in Washington. It Is obvious that men In Washlncton who are responsible for granting or restoring · permits ~mder such conditions have no Proper place In the government servJ,ee!' Militia Will Comb Woods Merideth, N. H.-A tbl:lusand armed aeD, led by Governor Winant, pounded the brush Ill the woods on Merf· deth bm In a fruitless search for Frank George Fellows, Tenneasee jall breaker, who abot Constable George B. Dow In Ashland recently. The searchers, grim In their determtnaatJ,on to capture the outlaw, retraced their steps and prepared to comb the woods again. Joining with the mllf· tla In an encompassing movement were sev.eral hundred armed citizens who had spent the night guarding the Ticlnlty where a man believed to haTe been Fellows exchanged shots \l(ith Frank Pellotte, a citizen who had sighted him. ------ Girl Falls To Her Death Boston, Mass.-.Aanle Emllene Hop. ld.ns, 22-year-old beauty contest win· u.er and one-time musical comedy chorus girl, fell four stories to her death In an apartmeat as a meJTY party at which she was a guest was brealdng up. She was found on the ~arble noor of the vestibule after slle had toppled oTer a low banillter along a dimly lighted stairway from ~e apartment of Joseph L. Sullivan, who had been lier host. She died while being taken to a. hospital in ~hton. - - - - - - N. v. Elk Club Bar Ia Padlocked New York Clty.-The Elks club of ~ew York has accepted a "padlock" f~r alz JD()Jlths closlnc the situation which hal crown out of proceedlnp ~stttuted 117' United States .l.tt.orDey Bucber uder the prohibition lawa. For ~ aezt halt year the gr111-room •d. bar of the club will be locked and lljllal.._ Mr. Buckner explained that Wilen reet&UJ'IUlts were incidaDt&UY IPillleoted wtth Uvtng qurten, ODl7 ~ i9n:aer wue closed. W~ltl Take Profits Out Of Colli o.leDill"', ni.-NatlonaUzaUoa of "fllel wu a4nnced as a solatloa of ~ 901,1 mlntq problem by J!lqene V. DeltJite Ill an address llere. llltmlll· ~oa cC the production of coal for JJiroftt aDd ol. lone worldnc ho1ll'8 RD• der ll&tloaal managemeat, the soolal· • le&.lhr sai4, would ead ~memplo;r miners. There are too inlllt. _.,.,. anemployad. whlle ehJJdrea work, -.. saN, and IUlvocated forqtq ~a to ltaY In school ao tbetJ ..,. eoal4 have their jo• amo• • Washlngton.-Tbe Amerlan and Italian debt commissions have signed an agreement for the funding of Italy's war debt to the United States, calculated for the settlements at $2,· 042,000,000. Terms of the funding ll{rangement agreed apon after ten days of negotiation and accepted by the Italian eommlsslon as a "Tery generous" treatment of the 'problem, provide for the usual stxty-two-year amortization period. In the formal announcement of the terms the Amerfj:'an commission said It feels they "lay as heavy a burden on the Italian people at we are justified In Imposing, and representa Italy's capacity to pay." Both the interest charges, which do not begin until the sixth year, and the annual payments on principal are fixed on a gradually Increasing scale to meet the debtor nation's capacity z to pay. Beginning at one-eighth of 1 per cent for the first ten years of the interest period, the Interest rate in· creasee during successive ten-year periods to a :nuulmum of 2 per cent during the last seven years. With the settlement, It approved by congress and the Italian government, to date from June 16 last, for the first flTe years the annual payment would be approximately $6,000',000 scallng from $14,000,000 to $18,000,000 during the sixth to the fifteenth years, Inclusive, and thence increasing to a mlxlmum of $'13,000,000 to $80,000,000 durlnc the last seTen years. Besides a reduction of back Inter· est charge In ffldng the amount to be paid off, the American commission feels that It has made even greater concessions in the future Interest charges and· the division of aanual amortization payments. In addition, It not only agreed to allow a delay of two years In making a payment whenever Italy's financial condition warranted, but gave permls· slon to pay off the postponed annultl~s In ,the third and fourth years af· ter due, with an Interest rate of f 14 per cent applying on delayed pay. menta. In the British and other set· tlements, except the Belgian, postponed payments must be liquidated In the third year. This concession to Italy was made when Its delegates Withdrew their demand f.or a safeguard clause against unexpected ex· change fluctuations. The American commission's an· nouncement of the settlement pointed to Italy's relative poverty In natur· al resources and Indicated the consideration It had given that Dalton's future In the obsenatlon that this "depends upon the development of her Industry and the labor of her people." Boise, ldabo.-Tbe American Falla reservoir will be the largest artificial body of water In the United States and the third largest In the world as a result of official authority that was transmitted by the regional office of the United States reclamation servk:e at Denver to Engineer Banks, in charge of construction at American Falls. ~E PAJrr>' FREEDOM IS CIV£N TH IBUH PAID TO ~~;~}~£:?,:~t:~ig:~Jf:§ 1 COLORADO DOCTOR NATIONS SOlDIERS ~~;~~:~~:!:o!;lB:r~~:~::s:n:f 1 :: re· teet, additional twelve dam giant 700,000 1, of Impounding the In , suiting acre feet of water In a reservoir that ; JURY FAILS OF AGREEMENT AND ARMISTICE DAY IS FITTIN:aLY will be thirty-five miles long. This Is OBSERVED THROUGHOUT JUDGE ORDERS DR. BLAZER addition of approximately 700,000 an THE COUNTRY BE RELEASED acre feet, as under the former plans had they been carried out, and the 1height of the dam not raised, the res· Prosecution Declares Coat Prohibita President Lays Wreath On Tomb Of ervoir would have impounded 1,045,· 000 acre feet of water. Another Trial; Doubts If Jury To Unknown Hero At Arlington; The raising of the dam, permitting Convict Could Be Found War Time President's Burial Anywhere the Impounding of 700,000 acre feet Place VIsited additional, will make It possible to have water sufficient to take care all the land that can be Irrigated of contrast striking Washlngton.-In Littleton, Colo.-Dr. Harold' Elmer American Falls, east of Bru· below Blazer was cleared of all charges In With the delirious rejoicing seven ~.fountain Home, but does and neau connection with the death of his 34- years ago over cessation of the world not b:i.clude the · land In the Boise· year-old emblcile and · crippled daugh- war hostilities, the capital quietly ob- Mountain Home project. Under the served Armistice day, with impressive ter, Hazel, on February 24th original plans the dam was to be con· Tbe action came less than an hour ceremonies at the' Unknown Soldier's structed on a basis of $7 per acre-foot. after the jury, trying him on the tomb In Arllngton cemetecy and at Under the increased plan as now au· charge of murdering the "eh.fld wo- Washington cathedral; burial place of tborized the charge wlll be $5 per man," announced It bad not reached Woodrow Wllson, the wartime presl· acre·foot, the cheapest storage now [ In existence In the United States. a verdict and was discharged by dent. This saves the settlers $2 per acreAt 11 o'clock, as President Coolidge Judge Samuel .Johnson. Summoned hastily from his home was placing a wreath on the sarco- foot. To the American Falls reser· of Prosecutor Joel E. Stone ape pared be- phagus at Arllngton, governmental ac· voir district it means a saving possible makes It $600,000. than more minute a for fore the presiding judge and made a tivltles were suspended or two while officials and clerks join· all of the available sterage of the motion for dismissal of all charges ed 1n a trlbdte of alienee. In the city great Snake riTer and the .maintain· and the release of Dr. Blazer, who generally, however, little attention ing of a water level that will be sat· was taken fnto custody immediately was paid to the suggestion of the lsfactory at all times, whether It hapafter the jury was dlscharr;ed. president for a brief period of silence I pens to be a short or a long water and on the streets and in business 1 year. Littleton, Colo.-Tbe legal status of houses there practically was no lull In other words, there always wfll murder "committed for love" still re· In activities. be In the reservoir sufficient water mains undetermined In Colorado juris· On his motor trip to Arlington cdlli· to lrr1gate the ~andis that are fnclud· 1 pru~ence. etery, the president was accompanied ed w thin the dtstr ct, sa.ld Mr. Shep. Hopelessly deadlocked, the jary se- by Mrs. Coolidge, Secretary Davis of 1 herd. lected to try Dr. Harold Elmer Bla· the war department, and Secretary Former Klan Leader Guilty zer on a charge of murdering his Wilbur. Mr. Coolldge advanced on Noblesville, Ind.-C. Stephenson, daughter, Hazel, the 34-year·old "child foot to the tomb, promptly at 11 woman" was discharged by Judge o'clock the hour the armistice be- former grand· dragon of the kiana, Is Johnson. came effective, placed a large wreath not above the law in Indiana. A jury "I am satlsfief.," Prosecuting At· on the tomb and then stood for a mo- of twelve Hamllton county farmers decided so when they found him gull· ment In silence with head bared. torney Joel E. Stone declared. A moment later, Mrs. Coolidge went ty of murdering Madge Oberbaltzer "It l8 unllkely that I shall bring acto the marble tomb, placing upon It and sentenced him to life imprison· tion against Blazer again." . "We are satisfied," was the declara· a long·stemmed white rose. The en- ment. Earl Klinck and Earl Gentry, tion of Lewis Mowry, chief of defense tire ceremony occupied not more than klan hen~hmen and codefendants, counsel "At least a division of opln· three minutes and was devoid of were acqmtted. Announcement that Jon Indicates there were some minds speechmaklng. As the automobiles In the jury had arrived at a verdlcl on the jury who considered that the the presidential party drew near the came after the crowd apparently had cold facts of law should be tempered tomb, a 21-gun salute was flrod by 1 despaired and departed for supper. a Fort Myer artfllery battery and a The gong, which was the signal from with justifiable mercy." 1 Moscow Church Whitewashed The jurors refused to Intimate bow band played "The Star-Spangled Ban· the juryroom in the tower, brought the from orders Moscow.-Under they stood in their balloting when they ner" juiJt before the wreath·laylng ! throngs scattering to fill the empty government, every church, monastl\f'· ftled out of the courtroom folloWing ceremony took place. , seats. Bailiffs were dispatched to j bring the prisoners. and phone calls try, cathedral and convent In Moscow discharge. their were made to Judge Will Sparks and 1 hu been whitewashed. This giTes custody Into taken was mazer Dr. attorneys. "We, the jury, find the License Denied Club Folks Unmarried the otherwtse drab city an air of fm· un· held be to Haynes Roy Sheriff of C. Stephenson guilty of mur· David Los Angeles.-The 1-want-to-Be-Hap. maculate cleanliness and purity. Even District while bail furnished be tll PY Widows and Widowers' club, which i der In the second degree," Judge the diminutive shrine of the Iberian a decision on recently .tlled articles of incorporation ; Sparks read from the written verdict reached Stone Attorney Virmln at the entrance to Red Square action may be taken. with the secretary of state in Sacra- i which was handed to JUm by William which to the devout Russian fa the what further attorney indicated, mento, and announced its Intention of ~ Johnson, forman, after the jury was district The most sacred spot In Russia, bas been painted. Nearby, In letters of white however, that It was most unlikely fuuctionlng in Los Angeles, will have ; seated. stone on a red background, Is the that Blazer would be brought to trial to l>e happy somewhere else. Its apLaundry Businns Pays Army plication for a permit to conduct a famous Communist J.nscription bor- again. • of. bail fdr ask probably shall "I army made more washington.-The . wid· and widows dance hall for lonely rowed from Karl Man:, "Religion ill under held was he as same the $5000, during the dollars million half a than board owers was denied here by the the oph1m of the people." previously," Ston2 said. "Homicide of pollee commissioners. ot operation the In r ! last fiscal yea· Pershing Asks For Addtlonal Men for love" was the way Blazer's act ! laundry and dry cleaning plants for Washlngton.-General Pershing has was characterized by defense during oftlcers and enlisted men. Major GenCabinet Crisis Looms. asked for the presence in Africa of the trial. "We grant that he slew the . The Hague.-A ministerial crisis fa eral William H. Hart, army quartereight additional American Army of· girl, but we deny that he did It with foreshadowed following adoption by master general, In his report to the fleers to be attached to the start of mallee aforthought or that he was of a Protestant secretary of war, made public here, the Tacna-Arica plebiscitary commis- sane when he did It," was the bur- the second chamber calling said laundry service was furnished amendment budget deputy's sion, of which he Is president. He den of the defense. enlisted men at $1.76 per month and legation Datch the of withdrawal for specified that two of the officers be The slaying was prompted by the at the Vltfcan. Premier Colljtn re- that $66,110,000 pieces of laundry from the judge advocate general's of· fear that he would be taken and that quested adjournment of the budge.t were handled. The net earnings for flee and · others line officers. Hazel would tlecome a burden on discussion when the four Catholic the years from both laundries and I someone else, Dr. Blazer declared In members of his cabinet notified him cleaning establishments amounted to Expert Lion Killer Sent Out letters which he wrote to explain his Redding, Calft.-J. E. Bnrce, lion act. After the slaying, the old doctor they would resign if the amendment $634,684. Ittner employed by the state fish and made two unsucessful attempts to end were aceepted. The cabinet Is consld· Chicago Will Build More Schools game commission bas left here for hill llte--once with polsoa and the erlng the situation. Chlcago.-Pians for a $21,000,000 Trinity county to war on lions that other time by slashing h1s throat with school building program for 1926, the are playing havoc with cattle and Wanted Msn Is Captured · largest ever attempted by Chicago, a razor. aheep. The toll of the lions cam· Vinton, Iowa.-Harold Ponder, • were announced by the board of edupalgn on the livestock in the last beeu bas thief, automobile Iowa caped cation. Twenty-four new schools and Cruh 'l"en Dead In Trltln three weeks fa said to be around the connee> In Wyo., Laramie, at arrested five junior high schools are Included. Plalnbore, N • .J.-Speedlng through hllDdred mark. Brace bas a record Myrtle Mrs. of murder The new buildings wlll represent a a dense fa«, the PennsylTanfa rs11· tlon with the ot ldlllng over 300 lions. the of combined seating capacity of 21,000. road's Mercantile Express from St. Underwood Cook, president Louis crashed into the rear sleeping Benton county W. C. T. 11. September Three Die In Explosion Captain's Request Granted Montreal.-Three ~eu were ldlled car of an express train from Wash- 7, according to Information received Paul Foley Washington.-Captaln by an explosion which destroyed the ington, ktlllntr at least ten persons by James Risden of the state depart. request by own pacldng room of the Canadian Ex· and Injuring forty, some of whom are ment of justice. Ponder escaped from was relteved at his ploslTe eompany at Belofel, about not expected to surnn. Both tralas Fort Madison, where he was servlnc Secretary Wilbur as judge advocate of the Shenandoah court of inquiry. a sentence for automobile stealing. were bound for New York. twenty-ftve miles from Montreal. lasf- L. D. S. Business College SCHOOL or IErriCIII!NCY All-.unercial blmlehea. Catalolr tr.. 00 N. Mal• St. . .LT LAK.e CITY. UTAII BARB ER OOLLBOES Learn barber t rade. Catalogue tree. Dlplomu INued. .Uolor Barber Coll ege, lU R~~trent st. WHITE LEGHORN BABY CHICKS Guarantee d at u rdy. lively. pure B:ngltab strain. Double pedtwreed atock. No Inbreed· lng. heavy egg pro4ucera. pullets. 3 montba ol<l . Br~<l rr otn 281 to 31 •·•Slr record Ilona. HIGHEST QUAUft COCKF.RF:I.S UNIVERSAL PICTURES CORP. Poultry FIR- Dept.. lieetloll 211A Callfonala • UniTerBOI ('lty Hia Curio.ity Arouaecl The gardener of a large house one day approacbed the butler. "Mort!· mer," he exclaimed, "you !Jllght point this chop, Darwin, out to me the next time he comes to dinner." "Dnnvin, Darwin," echoed the butler, looking perplexed. "Yes, Darwin. I happened to hear his lorrlshlp say the other day that every time he looks at me his mind goes back to Darwln."-Edlnburgb Scotsman. DEMAND "BAYER" ASPIRIN c....- Aspirin Marked With "Bayer Hae Been Proved Safe by Million&. Warning! · Unless fOU see the name "Bayer" on package or on tabletB :you are not getting the genuine Ba:yer Aspirin proved safe by milll0118 an4 prescribed by physicians for 25 Jear&. Say "Bayer'' when yo.u buy Aspirin. (mltatlons may prove dangeroua.-AdT. Air Mileage 28,000,000 On .January 1, 1925, more than 28.· 000,000 miles had beep llown In regular seheduled air service In the United StatPs and Europe. I 1 j 1 I 1 Hundred Dry Agents LeJ Out New York.-John A. Foster, prohlbl· t1cm adminilltrator bas notified 108 prolllbtttoa agents that their MrTfces would JlO longer be required Ill this district. The order dismissed all but tweaty-flve of the men in the depart:meat. It Is understood that most of tile aceats will be rehired, but that some w1ll be dropped permanently .. patt of the program of MODOIIIY. "polite dll.A-.oD.~ those who got ~ weN "llay'' EIDateta aad Moe Ltn-7. Diamond Merchant Robbed Mtnneapollll, Mlnn.-Two men who followed their Tlctim to the fitth noor of a downtown otflce bulldtng here robbed B. Kaufm&D, a dlamontl lm· porter of gems Talued at $<10,000 in a dar!Dg daJ'IIght holdup here. The two meD stepped from the eleyator with Kaafman Into the fifth noor corridors, which were detllertotd. nourish· ed weapons and compelled the merchallt to hand over a wallet coatat. Inc the stonee• Owea Government Six Centa, P.aya Middleton, Ohlo.-HaTing cheated hill covernment of 6 cents when a boy, • Middleton man relieved hia conscience by squaring hill account with Postmal!ter Frank B. Pauly. Three two-c..nt postage stamps aocompanfed a letter to the postmaster, whleh read as follows. ''When 1 was a boy, I used aome aecond·hand stamps. Now I am saved from IDJ sin. Here are your stampis. Bell them. God bless you." No atpatare was atta~IIMMI. 'lltats wllat Million& of women havedoae with T C~!!!I!! BAJI.ING pow_, . ........... p . . . . . . . ? • •, •• •••as tt.-• atrl ........ pedis ta •n• -" ..... I Four Ole When Traina Hit Renvflle, Minn.- F'our trainmen were killed and several other persona injured when the Columbian crack coast train ot the Chfca!JO, llllwaultee &: St. Paul rallway, colllded head-on with a freight train near here. The passengers aad ·five trainmen are In the MonteTldo hospital, wheFe their Injuries wwe declared painful but not serious. Other passencers 011 the Colnmblan were shaken up and some l1lflere4 acratch• &114 brulse8. Rft BY lift .alii ss/a II II 1'.111 . . . ., Otla• lie!. . |