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Show THE SALINA SUN, SAUNA, UTAH The automobile has been accused of destroying American home life and along comes the radio to restore it rians for the evacuation of thi the United Dominican republic by Slates marines, who hate been sta tioned there for almost seven years hare been completed with the assign, ment of the naval transports Henderand Jason tc son, Klttery, Beaufort the task of removing the 1800 men The evacuation A WEEKS now on the island. RESUME OF THE will start as soon as possible aftei DOINGS IN THIS AND OTHER ' July 10. COUNTRIES Suit for $25,000 damages was filed Important Event of the Laet 8even in supreme court at New York by Mrs. Alary Carey of New Rochelle Day Report' by Wire and against the manufacturer and sellei for the Benefit of the of a "l.ot cross bun that last April Busy Reader , caused lier she says, to lose all her r front teeth, injure her Jaw and gums, WE8TERN and permantently impaired l her bun She the appearance. says of Mr. Kennie Solomon Adler Ban Francisco voluntarily relinquish- contained a wire nail. ed her claim to the $100,000 estate Bishop Levi I Coppin of the Afri. of her late husband, John S. Adler, can Methodist Episcopal church is In order that it might go to his sis- dead at Philadelphia of pneumonia ter, Miss Clara Adler of the Elms He was 70 years old. I'ishop Cop hotel, Chicago, when Adlers will ping bad supervision over the Fourth came up for probate in superior Episcopal district, which comprises the states of Michigan, Illinois and eourt. TELEGRAPHIC TALES Pro-par- ed per-sona- Mrs. Henry Landes, wife of the dean of science in the University of Washington' and acting mayor of Seattle in the absence of Dr. Edwin J. Brown, mayor, at the Democratic national convention in New York City, has taken personal charge of the police department. Mrs. Landes removed William B. Severyne from the office of chief of police, after he had given him twenty-fou- r hours to effect reforms in the city and in his department, and he defied her. Fresno, Calif. General Grant national park, with its towering sequoias, has been saved from the flames which for three days have swept menacingly toward it. A battle at the county road leading into the park and along Mill Creek, several miles from the park, has succeeded It was declared by fighters. The main effort is now being made to ave the $1,000,000 grove of giant redwoods on Redwood mountain on the eastern side of the fire. Gearhart, Ore. Taxation of electric light and power companies in Oregon, Washington, Idaho, Montana and Utah has increased 42 per cent In the last three years, according to statistics assembled by George l. Myera, president of the Northwest Electric Light and Power association and presented at Thursday nights session of the associations annual convention. This percentage of tax Increase, President Myers declared, is greater than the combined increase in the amount of money invested, the gross revenues, expense of operation net revenue and fixed charges of all the companies in this geographic division. of the thirty-threnurses in Nevada are employed at St. Mary hospital in Reno, according to a list of registered Nevada nurses received by Secretary of State W. G. Greathouse. Altogether there t are nurses registered in this state, but only thirty-thre- e have Nevada addresses. Twenty-tw- o e niety-eigh- Report from Cheyenne is that State Treasurer John Snyder will draw a check for $400,000 July 1st and apply it on the state highway bonds. This makes a total paid on these bonds which were floated several years ago of $1,650,000, and leaves a balance due of $2,950,000. Indiana. Definite assurance miers conference that the pre- in Ixrndon will be restricted to a discussion of the Dawes plan for reparation settlement and that the subject of Interallied debts will not be permitted to come forward has reached the Washington government. A violent windstorm which reached a velocity of fifty-twmiles an o hour, swept the southern section of Omaha, unroofing buildings, leveling light and telephone wires and wrecking a number of houses. Several persons were hurt. Property damage was heavy. There was some loss of livestock. Many persons were reported injured at New York by an explosion of undetermined origin on board the British freighter Egremont Castle at her clock in Brooklyn. Two alarms of fire were sounded and half a dozen ambulances summoned. II. II. Biglow, millionaire president of Brown and Bigelow, St. Paul advertising concern, was sentenced to two years in Leavenworth penitentiary and fined $10,000 in federal court at St. Paul, Minn., when h , pleaded guilty to attempting to defraud the government of income tax returns. Andrew Mellons, secretary of the treasury, and Arthur Sixsmith, his secretary, have been subpoenaed to appear at witnesses for the defense in the trial of Gas-toMeans and Elmer Jarnecke, who are charged with violation of the prohibition laws. FOREIGN Roald Amundsen, the explorer, who has been preparing for an airplane expedition to the North Pole, has announced that the trip has been postponed because of economic difficulties, according to a dispatch from Pisa, Italy. Captain Amundsen jd it would be out of the question for his expedition to start this year. A free for all fight between Amer- ican and Filipino sailors from American warships at Torquay was reported by the Press Association. The Filipinos are reported to have used knives, wounding two Yankee sailors. The fight started in a dance hall. The chief of the Yokohoma customs force has apologized to United States Consul Kemper for the discourteous treatment to whiuh American passengers of the President Madison were subjected by members of his staff. Some of the American passengers of the President Madison were forced to undergo an unusually rigorous examination when the vessel arrived here on June 24, including the removal of their shoes. Superior offi oers intervened and apologized to the Since that 'incident passengers. . mid-Jul- y 1 Anne Stillman to Marry H. P. Davison James A. Stillman has announced at IleasantvIUe, N. Y., the engagement of her daughter, Miss Anne, to Henry P. Davison, son of the late 11. P. Davison, who was a partner Mrs. A large Chicago firm has stopped selling revolvers and now the wives are thinking of learning to use shotguns. TREMENDOUS FORCE OF TWISTER TEARS TOWNS INTO MASS OF RUINS Car Are Blown From Tracks; 125 Blocks Are. Wrecked in Lorain; Thousands Left Home- less the firm of J. I. Morgan & Co. and one of the most tinted financiers and philanthropists In America. The wedding i$ to take place in October. Miss Stillman Is twenty-twyears old. Mr. Davison Is twenty-six- . They have been acquainted since childhood. Miss Stillman Is the daughter of James A. Stillman, former head of the National City hank. When her father attempted to divorce her mother the young woman remained with the latter, though keeping on friendly terms with both parents. She has been a student at a private school in Paris. She is at present living with her mother at the Stillman place at Ileasantvllle, N. Y. Mr. Davison is the second son ef the lute II. P. Davison, who died May 6, 1922. He left n large estate, the value of which never has been disclosed, $4,500,000 being put in trust for the eldest son, F. Trubee Davison, and the rest for the widow, Mrs. Kate Trubee Davison. Mr. Davison went to Yale, leaving there temporarily to enlist In the naval air service Just before America entered the war. He flew overseas, having been attached for a time to the British forces. Air. Davison returned and finished Ilia course al Yule, being graduated in 1920. He then studied for a year at Trinity college, Cambridge, after which he went to work for the Morgan firm. The natives are quiet and respectful east Africa, a missionary writes-Wh- y dont they send a missionary to us? in Perhaps General Pershing's forthcoming book on the war may persuade the Germans that they were whipped. In Loraine, Ohio. Approximately 59 people are dead, 118 are injured and Dirty work at the grade crossing nearly half of the city of Lorain is lol'omotiveS are in ruins as the result of the tornado will continue until with life nets instead of cowequipped that twisted itself over the northern catchers. end of Ohio Saturday. Mayor George Hofmann estimated A few robins, says a naturalist the property damage at $25,000,000 stay North all winter. Supposedly visible and $5,000,000 invisible. About for the empty honor of being on hand 15 per cent of the citys population first in the spring. of 47,000, or a trifle over 7000 people, are homeless, they said. h Air. Burbank has produced a One hundred and twenty-fivis that believed it not but city prune, blocks, or about 25 per cent, of the the next war will be started over citys- residences were damaged, most who will get that. of them beyond repair. Of all the business buildings that line Lorains Here and there the conclusion has g main street, Broadway, been reached that chop suey would have proved more popular if it had only two, the postoffice and a Eagles club building, escaped come over as a game. without damage. Due to the confusion and darkness Reports that Bogoljubow lias defeatafter the storm many wild and ex- ed Alaroczy and Tarokower arent as not aggerated reports were current as to serious as they sound. Its chess; the number of dead and injured. As a new Balkan uprising. near as could be checked Saturday There would, of course, be more genthe above figures are authentic at eral interest in the Inheritance tax if this time. The Red Cross and coronmore people felt that they had a ers office, however, said that it will chance of being heirs. George F. Baker of New Y'ork has be several days before any accurate given $5,000,000 to Harvard univerrsity. count of the dead and injured can be American reds are following some made. Work is still being carried on Mr. Baker, who celebrated his of the plans that worked so well In birthday recently, has given :n the outlying residential districts Russia, for the minority that is now more than $10,000,000 to various public and the total may change most any in power in that country. Institutions during the last eight years. time. In accordance with Air. Bakers w'sh, The driving wind ripped and tore A California court decided that pethe $5,000,000 will be used to equip and everything in its path as it roared destrians have a right to walk in the finance the Harvard graduate school over this street, levelling most of the road, thus revealing that even in Calof business administration. It will be brick buildings at the second floor. ifornia some people have to walk. known as the George F. Baker foundaFrame structures, filling stations and tion. In his letter to Bishop Lawrence, other small buildings were entirely The British and American world I am especially! Air. Baker wrote: demolished and the wreckage strewn flights on no account must be considimpressed with the determination to ered a race, just- as a boxing match make the graduate school of business everywhere. must never become a prize fight. The wind administration of the very first imporblew cars from their turned trucks, tance in the country. A Greek city has been discovered comments over and hurled automobiles to the that was founded 2,246 years ago. "Mr. Bakers gift, and bent teletwisted curb, steel Bishop Lawrence, is unique in the anResidents of the place must be getnals of American education. It is to graph poles like wire; snapped off ting fed up on celebrating founders wooden hurlat the poles ground and finance the establishment In a great ed them across streets and on to day. university of a graduate department which seeks to cultivate the highest building roofs. who That divorcee of ninety-ninSome idea of the havoc wrought by was refused ethical and professional standards for for to remarry permission those comempluting a business career. A professional education for business the storm was apparently expressed two years presumably will arrive at does not mean education merely in technicalities, which, although Important, by a local contractor: the age of discretion at one hundred are secondary compared to the vision and broad intelligence Involved in leaderThe best way for us to do is to and one. ship In promoting the material prosperity of mankind. take everything away from the Air. Baker Is one of the richest men in the world. He Is chairman of the wrecked sections and build skulls have Some from the First National bank. Of recent years he has curtailed som. of his activities. ground up again. What is left is been disinterred in California. The Although he Is still personally connected with numerous banking and railroad really beyond repair. marvelous climate had preserved them enterprises and is regularly at his office when in New York. Thousands of trees are down for the purposes of real estate propaganda. through the residential district visited by the tornado and the tangled wires form a veritable spiders web Only tiling we can think of to say over-thregarding these men who kill their stricken area. Fortunately, the power plant ceased to function wives and then themselves is that if An "Eternal Light shaft, erected almost with the arrival of the storm they were really considerate theyd In Aiadlson square and presented to kill themselves first. and the fallen wires could not injure Rodman Wannmnker New York o six-inc- e - mile-lon- four-stor- y uiniutomioiitmiiintiiHiiiiiiiuiiimmiuinuiiiiimiimwiiiuiukuiiiiiiumiiiiiHiiiimiiHtiuimuiiiiiimuiiiiiiiiimiiiiutniiiimimiKiiiuiiiiuunuiiiiiuuHiiiimiuiuiiitiutmtiuiimiutiiiiiiiitiimuiiiuiiitmi $5,000,000 to Teach Ethics of Business eighty-fourt- h - ur e Of the apportionment among states for federal highway construction for the coming year, beginning July 1, Wyoming will receive $936,372. This announcement comes from Secretary Wallace. Lieutenant Russel L. Maughan succeeded on his third attempt in crossing the continent between daylight and dark, making the trip from New York to San Francisco with an average speed of more than 156 miles American passengers arriving here an hour. have been treated most courteously. Burglars ransacked the home of The United States will be invited Jack Bickford, motion picture actor, at Ixs Angeles and escaped with to send a representative to the proJewelry valued at between $37,000 and posed allied conference in London in $40,000, according to the police. The July in any capacity the American loss was discovered by a maid upon government thinks fit. Japan will her return to the house after a Sun- be included among the nations invited. day off. About $750,003,000 of private JapII A. Cunard Cummins, charge de archives of the British legation at the anese capital is invested in ManchurCity of Mexico lias crossed the border ia and Mongolia, according to statistics published by the colonial afinto the United States at fairs bureau of the Japanese governTexas, and left for San Antonio. lie refused to comment as to whether or ment. These figures do not innot his retirement from Mexico was clude the vast enterprises of the South Manchurian Railway company, voluntary. in which the Japanese government GENERAL is the principle shareholder. The British prime minister, RamCyrus E. Woods, ambassador to J&Ian has formally presented his re- sey MacDonald, and M. Ilerriot, the signation to President Coolidge and French premier, have agreed providit was accepted with an expression of ed there, is no objection from the appreciation for his services.. Refer- other allies, than an allied conferenring to the Jappese exclusion provi- ce shall be held in London not later sion in the Immigration for the purpose of law, Mr. than Woods declared Japan was conduct- definitely deciding on the procedure ing herself In the situation "with the to be adopted for putting the Dawes dignity of a great nation. report into execution. Geo. Pressleys ill feeling against his mother-i- n law, who had twice made a refuge for his wife after quarrels, was given by his neighbors in the Iron county hills west of Bis marck. Mo., as the cause of the deaths of his wife, son and himself. Both the state and the defense actively resumed preparation for the trial of Nathan Jr. and Leopold, Richard Loeb, millionaires' sons, who killed Robert Franks for excitement The according to their confessions. scheduled to begin August 4 trial If the license of an inexperienced driver is taken away for reckless" driving, how is he ever to learn? General Jame3 Hartzog, leader of the victorious parties in the recent elections in the Union of South Africa, accepted the premiership of South Africa, succeeding General Jan Christian Smutz. General Hertzog has begun the formation of a cabin- et Floods in the Ladoga region have engulfed sixty-onvillages. The water rose fourteen feet, causing enormous damage. Many lives are reported to have been lost and many e are homelesv. 15,000-year-ol- d Wanamakers Eternal Light in Gotham city by (portrait herewith) in the name of and who those mothers we worship, gave up those heroes who paid the supreme sacrifice on the field of vnlor," has been dedicated. Supporting the light which, It Is planned, shall burn forever, is the largest single shaft in existence. The symbol Is 125 feet above the square. It Is n gold star, five feet in diameter. The Oregon pine shaft is set in a bnse of pink Knoxville niaible 25 feet high, and on tills base Is inscribed the list of battles participated In by the New York troops. "Many of us are Inclined to forget only too quickly, said Mr. Wannmnker, discussing his gift, "that thousands of our bravest and finest, who had everything to live for, died that we might lie Imppy. How quickly fade events that once stirred our blood! This eternal light will make us think. If we are religiously inclined, we'll breathe a prayer when the soft glow among the treetops of Madison square comes within our vision. Champion Expounder of the Constitution Don Tyler of Los Angeles (portrait herewith) is the most eloquent expounder of the Constitution of the United States among young American students. So say the Judges for the In final national oratorical contest Washington, where seven competitors two girls and five boys chosen as the best from more than a million students, stepped forward and spoke In honor of the fundnmenlal law of the land, and the Judges should know, for they were Associate Justices Willis Van Devan-ter- , Pierce Butler. George Sutherland and Edward Terry Sanford of the United States Supreme court. They awarded the tiiree prizes of $3,500. $1.0tH) and $500 to these contestants: First, Don Tyler of Los Angeles representing the Pacific const and sponsored by the Los Angeles Times. Second, Ruth Newhurn of Washington, representing the national capital and sponsored by the Evening Star Third, John Al. Dullutn, 111, of Philadelphia, representing the eastern states and sponsored by the Philadelphia Bulletin. ' , President Coolidge presided and delivered an address on the Constitution The President declared that Americans in particular must be Impress 'd wit! the thought of the great responsibility upon them because of their leudershi In the work of substitution of democratic for autocratic forms of government Crises had come and been dealt with, he said, "In a fashion which has fl mil; established the conviction that It is possible for a democracy to lie strove, of enough to sustain Itself und yet not too strong to conserve the l ! the panic-stricke- n men, women and children as they rushed from their homes, or as they were blown and tossed about by the angry pell-me- 'i winds. Convention Chicago, Mob Ruled Says Lewis United States Senator J. Hamilton Lewis, who re. turned to Chicago from the Democratic national convention in New York to plead a case, referred to the Democratic convention as "mob-rule- d to the extent that the Republican convention at Cleveland was Democrats at the convention, lie said, are being driven into panic on the question whether the citizen should worship God according to tlip dictates of conscience or of Former hoss-rtilod.- pel: " the German prisoners held by tbe French have not been released, perhaps because it is feared that the activity of Some of passive-resistanc- e their pnssivity would be as great as before. Sun Y'at Sen talks of establishing a soviet government in China. Sun probably does not care what name is given the form of government, so long as he can arrange to be its undisputed head. The way nearly every candidate announces that lie "is not the candidate of any faction almost rom 's a suspicion that there is a political fear that factions are not approved by tbe voters. tbs. Looking For Jobs 1'reseott. Ariz. Cooks and waiters at Fort Whipple hospital, discharged by Colonel G. A. Alle, pest commandon strike in ant, when they went protest of a demand of patients for removal of Miss Ruth Dodge, chip! were looking for hospital dietician now jobs here. Xlie dietician's dis. charge Was asked following an cpi-dom- Salt Lake City Firms To insure prompt service and quick returns to these advertisements mention the name of this paper. BUSINESS COLLEGES L. D. S. BUSINESS COLLEGE. School of Efficiency. All commercial branches. Catalog free. 60 N. Main St., Salt Lake City. BOOKS AND SHORT i STORIES a week ago, when of illness 30) patients and employees were seized after eating tainted ice cream. PflfIKS Any hook 'ou want by mail, C, O. D LUU1YJ Hook ('o. it East So. Temple Death Lem s When Train Hits Car Spokane. Wash. Mrs. G. W. Gibson, her son, Dariel, and her father and mother, Mr. and Mrs. John Jordan, all of this city, were killed when an automobile in which thev were riding was struck by a Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul train in a rock cut two miles ou.h of Cheney, in this country. CflVf.S pas---enr- -- Wealthy Chicagoans Son Killed William Churchill, son of a wealthy Chicagoan, was killed hero when the automobile in which he was with six other companions riding Chicago. overturned near Northbrook Aiiss a suburb Louise Mayer, a niece of the late I.evi Mayer, who prominent ir. Illinois political cireb s was injure of th as were four other oc up.-nts car. who likewise were di. dan The p r;v v, wealthy Clrcngoar.3 dan--a from returning . SONGS & SHEET MUSIC new ,,n1 oId- - A" kinds. Sheet music by ma 1, coo. Iieesley Music Co. 57 S Main FKL'IT COXES A VEGETA I!I E CRATES short notice. Salt l.ake SUITS & DRESSES Box A Lumber Company1. CLEANEDTdYED Up to the minute Cleaning and Dyeing Return postage paid Regal Cleaning A Dyeing Co., 156 E. 2nd So. |