OCR Text |
Show THE JORDAN JOURNAL, MIDVALE. UTAH " fl] ~ i2l ~ ~ !~@f~lffillNIE!ffil& INTEREST IS KEEN SECURITY PACT NewsNotesi It's a Privilege to Live in mI IN HOOSIER STATE I MEETS APPROVAL ~ Uta Ho_mer:_ies_ _ D'----1 _ _ _____.10 !CAliFORNIA lAW IS " ~UST \llllttl tlE'> @ ~ I Golden brown. feather·ligbt Fiapjacks with plenty of syrup for sweet com • CONSTITUTIONAL MLE fO !If Of HELr ro US- tic @ ,I pany-you can't beat this happy morning combination ! ~ WAN T5 1b S'ffiiK E I I fC!&Jl'l.ffilffilii'lfiilr:ll.'EiftV"'i!!@'iii!C!Jiilf1il(j;)l@(j;)fiilr,;llr.ISiffi!!E!Iii FOR HIM SELF NAME OF SUCCESSOR TO SENA SIGNATURES ARE AFFIXED AT U. S. SUPREME COURT DECIDES Salt Lake City.- Comparatively CONVENTION HELD AT LOTOR RALSTON IS EAGERLY IN FAVOR OF SYNDICALISM "Albers stands far cheap chicken feed and particularly CARNO BY EUROPEANS VI TCHED AT CAPITOL LAW Better Break{. god prices for eggs are proving stim· ulating to the poultry industry In Utah. This situation has created a strong demand for pullets, which the Ex-Se1," c.r Beveridge Is Choice Ot Germans Are Accept'.!d by Other NaDecision Affect:; More Than One Hun· tions As Being On Equal FootAdministration Officials; GoverAll poultrym::~rket cannot supply. dred Persons Now Serving Pening For First Time Since The nor Would Like Tog:t For men who lJave what in other years itentiary Sentences In State • World War Himseif might be considered surplus numbers Of Ca!iiorr.'a of pullets are holding them and wondering if they can obtain more. Salt Lake City.-Casollne taxes col\\'ashington.-The rnlted sutes r. 11 • Locarno, Switzer!:;.nd.-Peace be· Washington.- ·washington awaits vemotor the lected in September by pr<!Ple tourt haR held in eff~ct that the appointment or a ,new senator tween Germany, France and Belgium hicle department of the secretary of from Indiana with an interest deep· at last is assured. The long sought I thC' Callfvrnia crim'' a s}ndicalism ' state amounted to approximately er than attaches to the mere filling for security V«Ct outl<!win6 wa.r fin· I lr w, under whic-h more thr.n a L•.ln· I dr<><l men a. d wcnH'n arc ~er-ing sen$10:\,000, compared with SG !,000 in of one va..:ancy among ninety-six sen· ally has been a]Jpro·;ed, and the sig· the same month in 1~:!4 and with $87,· ators. I t c.tcu> in Californ ·a prisons, "<IS co~natures of all contracting parties have 000 in August and $139,000 In July. t"t•tutional. A !JlE".t r·or c"mvlction The news sprE>ad through the coun· been attached. w 3 di ,r·lirs d 'l':ith(}Ut opinhn. Not only has tho Rhine pact been Brigham City.-Paul Jo'mson, 21 try from Washington and l~dianapolts 1 'fhe appc a! wn.s m •:1" b) ~i,., 3 C'haryears of age, of Collinston, was kill· is prevailingly to the E>ffect that ex·) agn•ed to, but the troublous quesdon l d when his gun was accidentally lotte An <.\ l"{hit:lry, O,>kl,mc., Calif:, I 1:"' discharged while he was in a 1.1!ind Topping Him Off ; year llrt· f:or.J he· con~i<t·on n~d duck hunting. Compa::J.ians with Joh.-:.- of national interest, for the appoint· I slovakia l!l;ewise has ~eeu resolved. 01 l!e--\\"on't yon sit in this chu\r? ~ca~if~~~~:n~~is~~ic~u c~-u~:;.J~;~. c ; ~~;'~ [ son found the body i:1 the blind, and, meut of an unknown wou!tl mean lit· Under the Western se-curity pact 1 according to their version and belief, you.-Washington (.;ougthe hunter met his death, when the ist labor party of California, and at- I trigger or hammer of his gun be· {ar into the states of mind of those attack or invade the otlter's territory , teuG.auco i:!t an organizatio!l ueeting came entangled in weeds or brush . whose counsel will affect tho appoint· and to abstain from wt.r. Standing c 1 ment do not share the common ex- in the background as guarantors of In the blind. a · of party labor communist the of 1 the ot terms the o' fulfillment Spanish Fork.-The Spanish Fo'fk pectation that Mr. Beveridge will get the 1 I HAD EVENTFUL AMERICAN FEDERATION OF LA-I iforn a. schools have closed for a two weehs' !t. TI1e candidates described as more agreement will be Great Britain am! SENATOR HAS marie I• law syndicalism criminal , it 'rhe · j a felony punishable by one to four· BOR IS NOT IN FAVOR OF CAREER; SERVED HIS STATE industrial vacation to aid In harvest- likely include an "ex-state cha:-rman Italy, ready to use their might against CUT WAGE ANY GOVERNOR AS tripartite the of signers the of any "ex· and party," Republican the of Ing. If the weather continues favorteen years in prison to belong to any district attorney," a "prominent law· agreement which violates its terms. 1 able, the majority or the beets can be 1 organization which ado:ocates or sym· pathizes with the use of violence to Should disagreements arise, arbi· rer," and "a son of the late Charles dug in that time. 1 bring about a change In the present 1 AdvoIs Also Day Working Shor-ter Old His Lebanon, To Taken Body states dissatisfied the between tration appela the of Some Cedar City.-1\faln street paving is W. Fairbanks." political and industrial system. cated By Labor Officials At AtHome Town For Burial; Death well along, and has been completed lions mean much outside of Indiana is obligatory. The P<lrmanE>nt court , Miss The law was enacted in Many Convention; City lantic Was Expected And Relatives It has not been much mentioned, of international justice boards of con· from the south end of town to the Es· but 1910 it is a fact that the possibilities c!l!ation and the council of the league calante hotel, a distan~e of three- most to the front at tlll· s mOIIlent in· Whitney was the first person to be Were Present Were Present t or . of nations all are possibilities fourts of a mile. The block from the elude the governor of the state him· settling disputes.. charged with violating it. An indict· tabernacle to the Escalante hotel has ment was returned against her on five There will he collateral arbitration self. Governor Jackson is "under been paved from curb to curb, while Pre"sure to sent! hi'n1self to the sen· J counts, one for each section of the convention J.-The N. City, Atlantic Ral· 1\I. Ind.-Samuel Indiianapolis, F d ranee treaties between Germany an ~ the street for two blocks south has ate," at least, that is the phrase in and Germany and Belgium which will ston, 67, junior United States sena· of the American Federation of Labor 1 law. Four of the counts were dls· but an eighteen foot pavement, di- which the idea is conveyed to those interlock with the llhinc pact itself tor from Indiana, and venerated pa· has gone on record as favoring a mi.:;red until the jury was unable to rectly iri the center. There remains who inquire. The process would con and also arbitration treaties between triarch of Indiana Democracy, died at poli.cy of wage increases and reduc- reach verdll:ts on them. 1 to be paved two blocks in length to The evidence was that l\1iss \Vhitsist or resignation fr·om the gover Germany and Poland and Czcchoslo- his estate, "Hoosier Home," nea7 here tion of hours in proportion to the inthe northern limits of Cedar. dividuars increasing power of produc· ney belonged to the Oaltland branch norship, and then appointment to thE! vakia. Separate conventions will bo after an illness of six weeks. Salt Lake City. Salt Lake City's senate by the lieutenant governor, drawn up hetween France and her of the state communist la'>Or party. Death came to the senator after tion. construction activities during the first those steps being made possible by Eastern allies guaranteeing France twenty-two hours of unconsciousness, A resolution adopted unanimously At a meeting of the state p:trty she nine months of the current year was the well-oiled amenities now exi~ting to aiel ihem if they should meet with cllmaxing au attack of uraemi.:: poi- asks wage earners everywhere to OP· introduced resolution'> to put the or- 1 16 per cent abo"Ve the comparable fig· in Indiana politic3. However, every unprovokerl or flagrant attack. soning which had confined the sana· pose wage reductions and to• urge gairation on record in favor of leg.::! I ure for last year, 8 ;per cent less than thing so far is surmise. Thc ;:>reseLt After initiating the Locarno agree- to to his bed since September 5, and upon manageme.ncs the elimination of 1 use of the baUot as the best way to that of 1923 and 70 per cent above fact is, the question has not ueen set· mens the variou~ treaties probably which had impaired his health since ~aste ~n production In ?rder that. sell· better the conditions of the working 1 that of the year before, according to tied, and there is a program of con· will be signed two wcelcs hence in early this year. mg pnces ruay be lov.er and wages peorrle. The resolutions were defeat· the S. W. Straus & Co. building sur- ferences during the presrnt week out Loudon. Undet· the Hhiue pact Ger· ed and others adopted which asserted Members of his family and more higher. vey of the Pacific coast section for of which a different result may come. manr is to join the league of nations, than a score of intimate friends were Saying th~t high wage stendarda the ballot was useless as a means to the first nine months of 1925. The Washington's curiosity and interest and the official:> of the league are gathered at the home to receive the assure sustamed purchasing power the end thE' organization sought. greatest volume of building ever pro- lie in the possibility that :\lr. Bever· anxious that sho do so at the earliest news, that death had come. Senator and means to €lJjoy cultured opporCounsel for Mis!l Whitney denied jected in nine months has been exper- idge may be named. To the ad minis moment possible and participate in Ralston had known for some weeks tunities, the resolution proceeds: that the Oakland branch was affiliatIenced by the Pacific coast area this trat!on and to the Republican partl the preliminary studies for the pre- of his condition and bade his family "We declare that wage reductions ed with the communi::;t labor p::;rty of year, or 6 per cent greater than last any other appointee would be a vote posed disarmament conference which and friends farewell before lapsing produce industrial and social unrest California at the time she belonged year, 5 per cent heavier than in 1923 But l\1r. Beveridge would be a voice the league will convoke when it be· into the coma which preceded h!s and that low wages are no,t conduc· to It, asserting that it was nothing and 31 per cent more than in 1922. more than a socialist party. tive to low production costs." It is common judgment that th• lieves Europe has reached the point death. Salt Lake City.-Homer P. Chris- greatest present need o! Preside~ of real security. Tho state contended thnt the or· "Social Inequality and industrial Mine runner in his early youth, tensen, 39 years of age, basketball Coolidge, the administration and the It Is no secret that Germany de- Ralston farmed and taught school be· instability must increase, the resolu· ganization of which Miss \Vhituey and track coach at the West High, Republican party is to have someone sires a lessoning in the armaments o! fore turning to the study of law, lion adds, unless the workers' real was a member, sympathized with the died at a local hospital following a in the senate willing to fight Mr. Cool· L \V. ·w. and the communist Interwages coupled with a continuing re· which opened a political career for duction d h t h b I' b . in hours "are progressed in her neigh ors, an t a s 0 e teves long illness. Christensen was born at idge's battles an d b e a bl e t o d o 1.t • natwnnle of Moscow; that they were ' . . . with peace secure, this will be attain- him and brought him in 1912 to the American Fork, May 3, 1886, a son of governorship of Indiana and in 1922 propor~ICn. to ,mans mcreased power; all tied together; and showed the Some Republican senators, like Gil· able. Neils and Phoebe Chipman Christen- lette and Butler, from Mr. Coolidge's· 1 chr..racter of one of the organizations, . . . of pro uctwn. Optimism prevails on the part of to the United States senatorship, sen. Explaiumg the new ~ohcy, ~llham 1 the Industrial \Vorkers of the World, After four years in the governor's own state of Massachusetts, are Joyal at least one of the main delegates to . Groen, federatiOn pres1dent, satd: . . Salt Lake City.-Owing to the late· a nd williu.g to fight his battles, but the conference here Austen Cham- c~au·, THE WORLD•s GREATEST "\Ve are on the threshold of a great by placing on the witness stand sev· Ral~ton had retired from poll· ;:-ess of the fa 11 season, the city com· are not able, because they are t!3o berlain, the British foreign secretary tiCS, and 1t was only at the behest industrial era. ·we are living in the era! meml• s ., ho testified a"l to acts 1 of vlol()nc '.tl..Jy or otht r m 'mbers of m~aslon, on recommendation of H. C. new in the senate, and are not speech· -that not only has good come from of clos f lends that he returned to new con· A power. giant of infancy , ., ~ e · on and able are who Others, makers. Jet. 'en, acting city engineer, decided committed. the Locarno conference to Europe, t_he arena_ m 192~ as the part_y s nom· J di"tt·on I·s here and we must meet it." the orgr.n:::.ttion lwd f 1 1 1 h 1 R 1 J I' Alb to n~fer waterproofing of the up· whom the party duty would normally but to the nations o f t h e wor ld . ll'rsh p o I mem c t to addition 11 The convention favored no:1-parti· ert . ,event ge, O· mee agamst the section of thE> M t under which strea.'l face of the old structure of lie lack willingness, for reasons "Relations have bien established," publican canrlidate, who had defeatF.J.n support for congressional candi· bl' ·an sena· •'th th R '. h -· :rlount-tin Dell dam until next spring. whic A unianism. trade to favorable dates said Mr. Chamberlain, "which will ed Senator Harry ~ew, now Postmast· 'ary WI . e epu tc,_ M:iss Whitney was convieterl, the law The a. don was announced following ~or whose capacitY ~o t~~~'w _ht~ hea_r~ j h"ve their rupercussion and repetition er gene:al In the pr_imaries. RaJ-~ committe~{ reporting on this subject ma,le it a felony to print, puulish, disa meeting of the commission in clos· mto defense of Mr., oo 1 be Js _Impa_u in the near future in the relations stan's victory gave an Jmpetus. to In· said that the "newest reactionary piny or !'lrculate the literature of one ed session. ed ~Y. the senators own prestdentlal I between other nations, and there will diana Democracy, which put lum for- campaign plans to overthrow the cf the for·bidden organizati(}"ls; jus- l emerge for J.<]urope not a peace pact ward last year as a candidate for I American for•n of gm·ernmC'nt atHl re· tify or attem;:>t to ju'ltlfy such an or· . . . Springville.-Springville has voted amlnt10ns. but a peace consented to 'the Democratic presidential nomina· l~ce ~~ by ~ supreme executi"e" It J:nnlzation or its actr.; aid or abet Coohdge :Mr. th~t JS 1t of net The $75,000 improvement bonds. $60,000 is les!l defended by hiS party leaders Iimposed, Contains· . . . . . r .. I t!on. . • all" ()It c rgani;se or orgwili'!ation nu such for rer1airlng and enlarging the water ln tho senate, is more at the mercy u> e· mo\ a of more thaD. proponents tnat declared . • . 1 . . · ,;:; congn of power the against ment m , forconventiOn a of York New the o.·~anlz.-,ion At the in st'ist premier t: fac1st tho 1\fussolim, Benito t 'd • • 1.1ystem and $1;),000 for improving the 1 of the oppositiOn the · · 1 1 1 · r . . . than any pres1 en were m t l<t- Jan• s would like lo ~et up another Mussol· bidden organization. or Italy is hel'e to aff1x; s1s tngnatnre 19 24 111s ortunes Cl C' ' • 1 city's electric lighing system. ol!'Ctinary · ' ' d · 1 t• D t T Th f •th eveof either party smce ,rover omas n~gar ' emocra IC ea . ini, anr! to abandon prim:try d.ectio'l.s. o I land. In the rejection by the senate to the Loc~rno ugreemen~ as, WI leavening Great nntam, one of the ..,uarantors er and long time personal friend of 1 The conve ntlou voted to m;spend . C 1. 1 , Salt Lake City.-All exhibitors in Reischst4!1J Chief Is Prtnt~r · 1 · 1t d · t f 1 f 1 · 1925 last spring of 111r. 00 H ge s appoms Building f t M th strength o t 1e Hena or, w 10 ms s e m presen- the Brotherhood of Ilt •. lway am! eneral in his cab· of the Rhm.eland pact. Fear u ' ann ac urer e Chi<. go,-Back ::m mg t/v<: c~ses. some lltMsible unto\';ard acts ag-ainst tation of his name over Ralston's Steulncllip clerks unkss . i<llin t1Fe 6 hre:-.thlng \Yith keen relish the udur o( tb 1 State Fa.ir, advised that they felt ~ee for at~~rner g .· • him by Socialists, from whose banner own strenuous objection. \Vhen It montlr'l it yieldr; juri.~diction over generously repaid for their efforts in met, he su ere a seirous se ac {, pr,nter's mk and han,1Jil:1!; the "ntick" he seceded to become a racist. Swiss appeared that his nomination would drivers, chauffeurt~, stable>nwn an<! \';ith tln dcxt<'rity of a m:>ster type· . . making an exhibit. As predicted preeES'l'l:\lr'TES'l' police officials and a bodyguard of offer an egrc3s from the l\lt'Addo· p;a:·age employ(;JO 1,1 the rntern,1.tion, 1 German Envoy Gets Ovtatton . vious to the opening, the attendance ~Ptter Iif'rr Paul Loe 1) c, pr ~si'l ::-nt of 1 Smith deadlock, however, and support Brotherhood of TcamstC'rs. Represl n<!'!a:tes % a tfmes taos~ Berlin.-The German delegatwn, fascists are guarding him. exceeded that of 192·1 of more than th(• German reiclntag, rE>nev;!'d his ac· began to rally to him, Ralston" im· tath·es or the clerks n.nnounced that 100 per cent. Approximately 125,000 headed by Dr. Hans LutlPr, the chan- 1 i 6nRY OC~.J:l" !brand tUaintD.J...(" ~vi!h the pti'lter;;' lrado in brother· their of members HO the his of withdrawal ordered mediately Again Home Wales Of Prince people visited the M<tnufacturers cellor, and Gustav Stressmaun, the , 000 thn compo ing rooms of til'' Herald nullrl!ng. The Ostler Candy Company foreign minister have reached Berlin 1 Lonrlon.-llritain's roving prince name, confiding to T~ggart that his hOIHl w~uld rather givo up its charter ant! J>Jxaminer. Herr Loche. who was Suburban Life secured first prize for the most ar· from Locrano. The ambassadors. of 1 has returned to his home Hhores. health was so preeanouH as to pre- 1tb:m sut rentlE'r jurisdiction. interparliamentary the to de,•r:ate a "Any h"nl>: in 1nur· hinl houses, s~, !ltl·~n:o Igle", 1·as of Pol·to I'l·co o(· elude the possibility of a strenuous listie booth; Utah Canners Associa· Great Britain and France, the Belgwn merotlng aL \Vashlngton is in Chicago 'l'omr1y ·~·· •. •ot ~·l't. tn• .;e\ era I faml· ' " "· "" tlou, first prize for the most effP.c· ( minister and other diplomats, as well : \Vhen word reached this city that campai:;n. S. Repulse'; which had carried 1 wi'!l other memb~_,,·s of the German lit's h:n·p inspected 'em." For ~cveral vears s~nator Ralston's ferc•d a resoh'lon asking that c the tive advertising display; the Associa· as the members of the cabinet, greet· ' H. M. · <ldt..r:atlon as a guest of prominent ou President to protest f(tlerution · and Afrka 'to \Vales of Prince the 1 h he and h0aith had net been sound ted Sugar Companies, first price for ed the r!'turning delegates at the sta· hubintsa mrn of G'rmun cxt'·action. 1e t at t i•Jge "i[ investigation proves South America in a six months' cruise d 11 d b · . had been comp()Jlerl to abandon the £ 111 c 1.,., 1,. of (T 111·tecl St"t's troop~ 1·nto h the most novel booth. and the Clover I tion. Since it was not known gener1 1 1 He IS a prmtcr y tn. he an · actress· ~ - " for." J::.ad arrived at Spit H'<H, t e crowc s rugged outrl,..or life which he had led p ~ ., · II h unealletl Leaf Dairy, firat prize for the most all~· when the train wou c arnve, e<l tne employes of t e prmt s op a!wma was began to gather by thousaTJds at the t'here was no public manifestation. educational booth. 1 ;:a "cc llcagues," shJ.\ing hands with ' many-towered Vieloria station. The since boyhood. As late as last July, 1 • , Pach. ?lann:d Colony Farm farms, his to trips marie he howe'>er, mo· lifnry Prince and Yt,rk of Duke Lewis Nathaniel \ Brigham City. 1 a~ Eli :\Tanatoha.-1\liss \Vinnipev,, manage· active in was he which of greet· unrl l'ortr.mouth to down 1 tored ell Mi-tch Represent White Will Boothe, 93, one of the early pioneers Giuseppe of d1ug'1ter ~rand Galiha!dt, Sev(Jral summer. late until ment San Antonio, Texas.-Colonel H. A. ed their brother when tho Repulse an· and a resident of Boxelder county Former G. A. R. Chief Dead since lil5:\, died at his home in Honey- White, jll!lge advocate of the Eighth 1 chorerl. Princes~-\ Mary waited for the weeks ago physicians told him thct G·Hib;tlcli, Italian l1ern, pas~;ed through Columbus, Ohio.- Daniel 1\L Hall, ville of aliments incident to old age. corps area, said that ~~ _had be_en re· ' arrival of the royal train at Victoria. his life depenclerl upon his remain· \\·innipeg on her way home after in-. "The makers of Tanlac will alwuys han 82. who served as commander in He had been ill about eight weeks. quested by Colonel W llham Mitchell A rou~ing reception, indicative of the ing in bed, and he faHed rapidly af- specting 40,000 acres of farm hmrl my warmest thail.ks, for I don't consider It chi.ef o! the , 'atlonnl Grand Army of j any c:roggcr&.tion to sny I owe my life and He was one of the oldest men in the to hold himself in readiness to re· one to greet the prince upon his ar· ter he learned that he would be bed- in Manitoba which banking interests 1 good health to Tanlac," Is tho of northern Italy plan to purchasn the Republic in 191!l, ass uning the 1 prcscnt , port at ·washington on short notice rival in London later in the day, was fast. county. striking stntement of Andrew Groeschner, ' Bell n. F. of death the upon offlcr tireman. Senator Ralston was a lifelong for 500 Italian families. If the deal given him at Ports~outh. He was 1 to act as military counsel for the fly. Presbyterian, and revered because of of New York, died here of heart di"Word• simply ean't express the tdsery Richfleld.-The Richfield commer· lng colonel "'·hen his expected trial ts com~Jieted, the· farmers are to bo I endured for 2 years from indigestion. At met by the m?.yor and all of the bar· cial club is seeking te induce the the In leader a he••n h;.d He seaile. times gas pains would catch me around the the geni~l honesty and sincerity brought to Manitoba next spring. t begins. 1 bor veRsels boomed out salutes. G. A. R. for many years. _ _ which he radiated. A man of power· heart and almost cut oir my bre:.th. These Denver & Rio Grande Western rail· I a l<ful pains \vould last two and t!n-ee hours. 1 s e t s N ew Recor d ( road to Increase its present facilities 1 Salt Lake Payer 1 Volstead r·•.. ade "D ry " At t orney ful build, he was known b ot h ail govBugs Will Fight Winter Aphis ll[y nervN wcro all unstrung. I slept poorly Home Elacl< Aviators 1 t 1 \" J 1 \ • 'tl · 1 f d In handling tourist traffic for south· · o s ea< , ":• shington.-• nt rew . :md got in surh a. bad way that my days Santa Ro~a. Calif.~Sonoma county ern or an sen a 1or or t 1e v1gor Wl 1 Sacramento.-Ba b e R ut h 1s no 1on g. squad r on un · n,omr. Th E' a•rr• I~!l.E' E'Ml Utah. It is urged that large num er home.run Icing, as far as Pacific lady bu~to aro again in demand. 800,· which h'l labored, anc1 h e was se 11 ""emed to be shortening rapidly. ~· com of :Minnesota, aut h or OL• th e nat·1ona 1 · 1en·'ll t c o!ill e 1 J>.o 1orrnes1,• · 11 b cen off'Icm h f · " "I tried everything, but disappointment hers of tourists coul<l be expeditious 1 1 ,1en cler Y hu.s aw, Coast baseball fans are concerned. 01)0 of them were shipped by express absent from a sesswn o t e senate prohibition my only reward until I began ta.Jdng was tour ~ tl t 1 1 !t I h . 1 f t t S cere ary c . by appointed llY Asstrtan . ~ ly routed through the area and that Tony LaZorre, shortstop on t h e Salt mont 11on E.. y as e ear w w· to countv. horticultural officials In rm- until he was stric k en 1as t sprmg T:mlac. I ha;a bct:n takiog Tanlac off and f 1 ., b facilities should he suppliP.d at l\Iaryson for a ye:u- now and feel so diJ!erent that .urope cen ra the Treasury Andrev;~=; to e attorney of t 11e capt as o Lake team of the Pacific Coast league perial county \(} be u!led in the eliru- what developE>d into his 1ast i11 ness. · Th , · 1 h d · · hlb" 1 there's no roorc. for comparison. I eat good ''ale, the present terminal of the sys· e ana· 0:ne .1ere 1t on a mtms- have arnvec Surviving him are the widow, a for the fourteen pro excelled Ruth's record by knocking !nation of aphis in winter ~ardening ' and slcop good and focl that Ta.nla:: hll8 1u ~ t 1 f t t t d h · t · f h tem, to transport tourists to the 1 1 11 • 1 given me a new lease on lift'." a fa tors \\'( re gucs s h o 1onor 800,000 bugs which mado daughter and two sons, n brot 1Jer, a tration distnc s, wtt11 en quar ers 1 · ~ a scenic wonders readily accessibl<l his sixtieth circuit c out o t e sea· there. The Tnnlac Is for ow.le by all good dr,Jggists. given by t e m 1mstry o aero· son In a garae h~re between Salt the journey to southern California sister and a nephew, all of Indian· 1\Iinneapolis. The position pays .. 5000 cheon [ Accept no subst!ttlte.. t'1cs. 1 s from that point. nan year. a apolis. hour. an over little a in collected were Lake and acramento. Logan.-The American Legion aux· Tanlac Vegetable Pllls recommendeil j by the manufactarers or Tanlac, Wage Law Receives Setback Baseball Argument Ends In Death Pirates Take Championship Survivor Talks Of Sub Sinking Athens Has American University lliary of Utah won the great prize at \Ya:Jhim;ton.-The Arizona mini· l Broklyn, N. Y.-A baseball argu· Forbes Field, PittRbtlrg.-The PHts· Boston.-Only three of the thirty· Athens.-In the presence of the the national convention in Omaha, on October S, this being the Lillian M. American minister, Irwin B. Laughlin, six members of the crew of the sub- burg Pirates took the baseball cham- ment cost Reidar Druisen, 30-year-old mum wage law for women was held Towno, trophy, a silver loving cup and members of the Greek govern· marine s.51 who were asleep when • pionship of the world from 'iVaRhin.!:';· seaman his life. Jlruisen, of Swedish to be uncon~<tltutional hy the supreme ton by battering \Valter Johnson and descent, held that Vl'alter Johnson of court. The court's position was set . ' standing nearly three feet high. It ment, the American school of Athens, 1 was awarded for the greatest percen- to provide western training for Gre-1 she was rammed by the steamer Ctty senri~g their third 2traight victory the S(mators, was the greatest of all forth by its action in affirming the tage of increases in membE>rshlP dur· cian youths, was formally opened. , of Rome off Block Island on Septem· over the Senators, 9 to 7, In a furious pitcher~. An un-named FrElnchman 1P.cislon of the lowPr court o! the ising the fiscal year closing just before The schools marks the first definite 1 ber 25, got out before she sank, Dow- battle fought out in a drizzlin!f rain contended that Remy Kremer of the .;ue. The attack upon the law was the convention. The honor was much step in the movement for the estab- 1 ey G. Kile a survivor, testified hr>fcre on a soggy field. More than .orty Pirate!!, deserved that honor. The made by A. Sarclell. owner of two sought after by all of the state de· llshment of an American university 1 the navy inquiry board investigating thousand rain·:lOaked but deliriuusly men backed their beliefs with blows stores at Nogales, who employed four partments and the Utah delegates to in Greece similar to the American col· the disaster. Kile, an engineman, first haopy fans saw the Pirater come from and Druisen's skull was fractured women ci.erks and contended that 1f the national convention were warmly leges in other near eastern countries. I class said he was asleep wl>Pn tho benfnd m a battle of brawn and pitch· when he was knoclwd to a curbstone. .:ompelled to pay them Pach a minicongratulated by representatives of It will be operated by the Greco· steamer struck the submaril<<>, and 1 mg wits and clinch the game In the He died a few minutes later. The mum o! $16 a week, his business I 11.-ould be ruined. eit;hth inning in a sm~s'tin~ double Frenchman escaped. thought they had drowned. American committee. all the other departments. '. I l ~~::;~~:n~e\·;~=;eis w;~e gc~le~h~aua:~ l ~~:li~ng t~!tl~~=;~~~a~o~· ~~~~Ul~:('sC:~~ ·ijA G[ REn uGT 10 l~ st NATO R RALSTON · I OF INO lANA n uIES ME ETCJ ~~u:z !~~ ~oa~~tr:akO:n t~a~·:~~in:r~:~ ~eel~~;~~at~::=~geFr~~~~~~~~:·"~~ta~~ I I 1 0 nppoelJ IT ION ~if~· o!~:l~u~~f~~~~~:~la:tzl~~u~'~s;~I:u~~ I ar~h~·:.~~~ft<•r U I ! I I I aspoonfit e I I many_ other Tllats wllvl CAUJJVB BAiiiNG JJOWD II I Goes farther lasts ~.u.,~J:.ICiM. I It I I I l I I I I I I j |