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Show THU SPANISH FORK PRESS, SPANISH FORK, UTAH Indian Chiefs Help Open Zion National Park THOMAS MARSHALL C"N I National park ! receiving tourlata again, and to make everything pleasant these Indiana, Chief Tom Moccasin, Medicine Man Tom Para-choand Chief Jimmy Pete of the Piute tribe formally lifted the spell of fear that baa gripped the re'daklna n when they oeared this beautiful In Utah. UNDER WOOO ROW WILSON LOSES GAL LANT FIGHT , r , f if Death Was Unexpected Ae Doctor Had Reported Him on Way to Reoovery; Nurse Only One ' ' ' 'M4 C llmZ ! 1 ; u ' & J 'Si-- 2 ."f I ' ! f ? j 1 X 9 t4 )f Cf r.&jy, I i , A A'f'f:V. ' - V i y.V ; vcc V tSZ i ' -- ' 'w' "v-- - 'w '(Wi , f A.-:- ; - VT'5 ' j. W r V V.'w? ;f v " ENFORCE LAW IS IH MEMORIAL; DAY ADDRESS AT CHICACO JURY NAMES TWO HUN ARLINGTON URGES BETTER DRED AND SIXTY-NINGOVERNMENT INDICTMENTS E We PRESIDING BISHOP OP U CHURCH GETS HIGH APPOINTMENT. D. 8. . V J We Not a Lawless People, But Many Firms Are Listed In Indictment Anthony W. Ivina Is Appointed Te Fill Position Of Late First CounAre Too Frequently Careless In ReCharging Combination . Said President Coolldge selor Charles W. Penrose . straint of Trado and ComIn Address merce By President Grant Washington. Appealing for more vigilant enforcement of law on the part of state and local governments and for a "universal observation of the constitution" by the American public, President Coolldge In a Memorial day address at Arlington cemetery declared that "what we need is not more federal ; government, but better local government." J "We are not a lawless people," said the president, "but we are too frequently a careless one. The multiplicity of laws, the varied possibilities of appeals, tbe disposition to technically In procedure, the delays and consequently the expense of litirespects to the president gation which Inevitably inure to the advantage of wealth and specialized Sultan Raya Ordered Arrested ability all these have been recountManila. P. I. Governor . General ed as reproaches to us. Leonard Wood has Instructed the con"It is strange that such laxities stabulary of Lanao province to cap- should persist in a time like the presture, if possible by peaceful means, ent, which Is marked by a determinSultan Raya, who escaped when hia ed upward movement in behalf of sofortress waa destroyed with the loss cial welfare. But they do exist. They f t ten lives. If Raya refuses to surdemonstrate a need for better, promphas or- ter, less irksome and expensive adrender, the governor general ' dered the constabulary to use force, ministration of the laws; for uniforand, if necessary, destroy another forof procedure; for more accurmity tress where Raya la seeking refuge. ate delimitation of state and federal y authority." Belgian Minister Visits Washington Mr. Coolldge made only passing refWashington. Preparatory to leav- erence to prohibition and did not aping for Brussels to discuss the debt ply his observations directly to any situation between the United States particular situation. Declaring that unit and Belgium, Baron de Cartier de "when the local government Machlenne, the Belgian ambassador, evades the responsibility it is started made a call at the White House and In the vicious way to disregard of law paid hla reipects to President Cool-idg- and laxity of living, he continued: The ambassador declined to The police force which is adminsay whether any reference to the istered on the assumption that the debt had been made In hla conversa- violation of aotne laws may be Igtion with the president.' nored baa started toward demoralization. .The community which approves such administration Is making danDry Agents War On Miami concessions. There is no use gerous The government is Washington. the fact that as a nation disguising rum move meet of to any prepared out toward the prevention attitude smuggler to transfer their major acpunishment of crime needs more tivities to southeastern waters, James and eortous attention The concluE. Jonee, assistant prohibition comsion is Inescapable that laxity of adsuron a return from his missioner, ministration reacts upon public opinvey In Florida, said conditions still were bad, but that ten coast guard ion, causing cynicism and loss of conIn both law and its enforceboats had been placed near Miami to fidence ment and thorefore in its observance. combat smuggling. . The failure of local government has a demoralizing effect In every direcClorlns Gasses Fifty tion. . Annemasse, Francs. Fifty persons "There are vital Issues In which the were gassed In ths streets here as nation greatly needs a revival of Ina thick screen of yellowish fumes terest and concern. It Is senseless to from a tank of liquid chlorine swept boast of our liberty when we find that The container ex- to do shocking an extent It is over the town. merely ploded from heat Twelve of the vic- the liberty to go It is In h condition. serious One time to take warning that neither the tims are of the minor cases of Injury was an liberties we prize nor tbe system unAmerican, Ernest Stelnworth, who der which we calirn them are safe lives In Geneva. while such conditions ezlst. e. Adverse Report Is Predicted Woman Stayer Sent To Prison Washington. An adverse report on Texas. Mrs. Frank CollHaskell, the proposed leasing of power at ier of Wichita Falls, Is facing ten Muscle Shoals, Ala., la expected to be in in connecthe years penitentiary war recommended to the department tion with the slaying of her commission. Shoals Muscle the by Elzte Robertson, last Members are understood to take the old A jury found her guilty view that the power will not be avail- February. able before December 1, and that by of murder and assessed the punishthat time the commissions report on ment after three hours' deliberation. the disposition of the property will Counsel for the defense announced be ready,. President Coolldge holds they would file a motion for a new that leases should not be made If they trial and appeal If the request was Interfere with final disposition. Asnled. son-ln-Ia- Chicago. Two hundred and sixty-nin- e indictments against manufacturers and individuals concerned in of refrigerators, the manufacture furniture and case goods, auch as dining room sets, bedroom equipment, radio cabinets and clock cases, whose plants are located all over the country, were returned In the United States district court here by the federal grand Jury. The indictments were divided into three classes, 190 manufacturers and two Individuals being Indicted in the men and case goods cases, fifty-fiv- e two Individuals In the furniture cases and eighteen manufacturers and two individuals In the refrigerator cases. . All were charged with being en gaged in a combination In restraint of trade and commerce and while the Indictments mention an unlawful condition existing since as far back as 1913, yet they specifically note that the violations of the law have taken place In the last three years. The indictments set forth that the refrigerator companies as named have done an aggregate business of annually; the chair companies $15,000,000 . annually, and the case $80,000,000 manufacturers, goods annually. The manufacturers Indicted In the case goods, such as dining room and bedroom furniture, radio cabinets and clock cases include: Northwestern Cabinet company, Burlington, la.; Showers Brothers company, of Burlington, la.; the Anderson-Winter company, of Clinton, la.; Cabinet Makers union of Indianapolis; several companies of Grand Rapids, Mich.; Janesville, WIs., and Rockford, 111., and companies in New York, Indiana, Pennsylvania, Illinois, Arkansas, Michigan, Ohio, Kentucky, Maryland, West Virginia, Minnesota, Missouri, Kansas and Massachusetts. Two of the individuals indicted were Arthur O. Brown, secretary of the National Alliance of Furniture Manufacturers and William 11. Coye, an employe and agent of the alliance. Utah Fishermen Hit Snag Ogden, Utah The Utah legislature at Its recent session passed an act which sought to prevent anglers from using more than two hooks on a line. But somebody blundered. City Judge Hendricks of Ogden found in a new volume of the statutes that the word "not" has crept Into the law, which now reads as follows: "It shall be unlawful not to use more than two hooks on any one line when angling for game fish. Attention to the error was called to the local sportsmen's organization and the members are now speculating on what can and what can't be done about 1L Coolldge Receive Memorial Coin Ga., The Stone Mountain memorial association has announced that President Coolldge had accepted as a gift the first coin minted under the act of congress authorizing five million half dollars In memory of The valor of Confederate soldiers. gift was Inlaid on a plate of Georgia gold and waa presented to the president on May fifteenth by Hollins N. Randolph, the president of the Atlanta, Salt Lake City. Charles W. Nib-lepresiding bishop of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-daSaints has been appointed second counselor In the First Presidency of the church. The appointment was made by the presidency and concurred In by the apostles assembled in regular meety ing, Anthony W. Ivins heretofore second counselor to President Heber J. Grant, was appointed first counselor, succeeding the late Charles W. Penrose. By these appointments, President Ivins is elevated, while Bishop Nib-le- y takes tbe position vacated by the former. Bishop Nibley, In company with United States Senator Reed Smoot, recently returned from California, after a sojourn there of a few weeks. Bishop Nibley was born in Hunter field, a small coal mining town eight miles south of Edinburgh, Scotland, February 5, 1849, of energetic and thrifty parents. His father was a coal miner. Both his parents . were possessed with a deep religious nature and five years before his birth they were converted to the teaching.) of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-daSaints by Elder Henry McEwan. In those early years of the Industrial revolution, the wage paid for labor was mall, and the family was kept from embarking for the United States on account of Insufficient funds. Finally in 1855, Bishop Nibleys father had accumulated enough money to croes the Atlantic. The Nibley family moved to Rhode Island after Its arrival here and took its abode there for five years. During that time the members worked in the woolen mills, before acquiring enough capital to venture westward to Utah. In tbe spring of I860, they started on their westward way and reached Florence, Neb., which waa the outfitting point for Utah emigration. Joining tbe company commanded by J. D. Roas, as captain, they reached the Salt Lake valley on September 3, and soon afterward established a permanent home at Wellaville, Cache county. y Chicago,' Eighteen persons are dead and nearly a score seriously Injured was the toll of the heat wave and ensuing wind and electrical storms which hit the Middle West last Tuesday and caused Its residents to await promised cooler weather with panting breath.' , From the Nebraska sand hills to In sevOhio, the heat was general. eral places it set records for the year and for June firsts of all recorded time. Then the humidity which covered the ceneral states like the proverbial blanket, waa pierced here and there by thunder showers and terri! fic gales. Mrs. Oliver Dinkins, 70, living north of Florence, an Omaha suburb, was killed In a severe storm which demolished her home. Another person was injured and several other nar' rowly escaped Injury. Mrs. Frank Hascher, a farmers wife, was killed by - lightning . near Muscatine, Iowa. Sioux City, Iowa, was the center of a violent storm, which extended to eastern South Dakota and southwestern Minnesota. Seven persons were injured, two probably fatally, in the Iowa city and more than a dozen houses were leveled by a wind that blew at the rate of 75 miles an hour for five minutes, and which reached a peak of almost 90 miles. The damage at Sioux City was estimated at $100,000. Eastern Iowa from Waterloo to Dubuque was visited by a less violent wind and electrical storm, but no serious damage was reported. Two persons were killed during an electrical storm at Des Moines and two men were reported killed near Wayland, Mo., when the car In which they were riding was swept from the road by a high wind. Another wind storm swept over the mining district of southeast Kansas, and southwest Missouri, causing Injury to several persons and considerable property damage. Chicago had four deaths attributable to the heat and Cleveland one. who Eight persons , In Wisconsin sought relief by swimming and boating were drowned Sunday and Mon- . day. Heat records for June 1 were broken in Chicago and Cleveland which had temperatures of 92 and 91, respectively, while ' Detroit, with 92, e came within two degrees to the June 1 mark. Early In the day a cooler breeze came to relieve Chicagos millions. Thunder showers and lower temperatures were forecast for thtrf vicinity. Minnesota, South Dakota and Ne- ... all-tim- braska reported that the recent rains brought relief from drought of a few week's duration that retarded growing crops. ' ' U. S. Troops Sent To China student riot Shanghai. Chinese participants fired from housetops In three directions into Shanghai streets upon a suit of the American volunteer corps, shooting Thomas G. McMurtin, an American dentist In the back, and killing the horse upon which McMar tin waa riding. American and other foreign units returned the fire of the Chinese with carbine rifles and pistols. Machine guns were mounted quickly In the streets and sent shot In the direction of the structures from which the Chinese started firing. The number of casualties was not estimated. The shooting of the American dentist, who Is a corporal in the volunteer organization, attempting with other foreign units to restore order in Shanghai, marked the first use of rifles by the Chinese since demonstrations started as a protest against the conviction of seventeen Chinese strikers who left Japanese-ownespinning mills near Shanghla. d Morgan Put Money In Italy 8. P. Desiree Bonds Rome. Finance Minister DeStefanl Washington. The Southern Pacific announced to the chamber of deputies company, which le buying $15,000,000 here that the banking firm of J. P. In new rolling stocks, asked the In- Morgan and company had granted a terstate commerce commission to ap- credit of $50,000,000 to a consortium prove an Issue of $10,491,000 In equip- of Italian banks, to be used to stabilment trust certificates to help finance ise exchange. Senor DeStefanl said the purchase. The railroad will ob- the director of the Bank of Italy will about preside over the consortium of Itallocomotives, tain 4500 freight cara and miscellaneous ian banka to which the Morgan credit has been granted. other equipment. forty-thre- e $50,-000,0- OH Man Keep Suicide Pact Los Angeles. T. W. Greer, wealthy oil operator shot and killed Mr. Alma Mapstead, 86, at his home here and then sent a bullet through hla own bead, dying Instantly, roltce said It was a case of frustrated love, the pair had evidence Indicating lives together. end their to agreed Mrs. Margaret Dowdy, Greer's housekeeper, and his two children were In the house at the time, but did not witness the shooting. , O 111. vWVj ' S f: ! 4 I. ry s'' M:!hr f (ji " yU f: I ,Af r T',"- . DEATH TOLL REACHES TWENTY-TWAS TERRIFIC WINDS VISITS ILLINOIS L Present Washington. Thomas R.- Marshall, wartime rice president of the United 8tatea !a dead. He passed away at the New Willard hotel, here, where he bad been 111 for several days with a cold and ' a heart affection. The end came unexpectedly, aa the former vice president had shown aome Improvement in the week be had been confined to his hotel room and plans had been made for bis return to hla home In Indianapolis some time this week. Accompanied by hla wife, Mr. Marshall came here a week ago. On his arrival be went to the hotel, complaining of a great exhaustion. When physicians were summoned It was found be had suffered from a heart attack. He regained strength gradually, however, and soon was in such a condition that It was possible for Mrs. Marshall to leave the bedside to attend to various personal errands. Death resulted from a recurrence of the heart attack when he suffered a week ago. Tentative plans were made for burial at Marion, Ind., near his father and mother, and a foster child who died recently. When the end came he was sitting up in bed reading from the Bible, to which he had turned throughout hia life for consolation and guidance, and Into whose passages he often delved in hla office adjoining the senate chamber In momenta when hla presence waa not required as presiding officer. Only a nurse was at the bedside. Mrs. Marshall waa . In an adjoining room.' Suddenly slumping down upon the pillows, he passed away without a word and apparently without pain. The room in which he died la on the fourth floor of the hotel overlooking F. street, Washingtons fashionable shopping conter. It waa In this hotel that he resided during his official life In Washington. The former vice . president had planned a ten-dastay in the capital. It was one of the periodic visits he had made here since hla retirement from the vice presidency in 1921, and on these occasions he always had called at the White House to pay his a Eight Are Drowned 8eoklng Relief From Heat In Water; flalno Brlng Relief To Burning . Crops t X'i j News Notes From All Parts of I UTAH I nt ' "mT r - para STATES Zion fUir VICE PRESIDENT GErPAL Plotters May Ge Free Los Angeles. The three men arrested for an alleged attempt to kidnap Mary Bickford and other film celebrities may escape punishment, because of a lack of evidence, according to District Attorney Asa Keyea. Though police say the alleged conspirators have confessed to a plot by which they were to have abducted "Mrr. Fairbanks, H and hold her for $200,000 ransom, the district attorney doubts If the case can be pressed because no actual crime waa committed. Salt Lake City. Judge Tllman D. Johnson of the federal court has dismissed the receivership of the Con olldated Wagon and Machine com pony. This court order means that the company will operate free from a receivers control which has existed for a considerable time. , septiSt. George. Hemorrahaglc cemia, a contageoua disease among cattle, has attacked the domestic cattle of SL George and vicinity and from forty to fifty of the best milch cows In this section have died In the last two or three months. Brigham City. Work on the new steel and concrete bridge to span Bear River near Corrinne Is now un der way and when completed will finish the federad road , project from The Corlnne Chase to Tremonton, bridge will be 2G7 feet long and the specifications covering its construction call for seventy tons of steel, 964 square yards of concrete and 600 - This bridge will be tl, cedar piles. largest In this section and should bo by September completed said. 1st, it le x Richfield. The board of education accompanied by Architects Hedlund and Watkins of Salt Lake City, Inspected the new schoolhouse at Venice. After a very thorough and careful Inspector, the building was accepted in every detalL This new school house is one of the most beautiful In the state of Utah and will meet all requirements of Venice schooling for a great many years to come. Ogden. Dedication of large slabs, upon which will be placed memorial tablets bearing the names of all veterans of the civil war who have been n members of post No. 3, Grand Army of the Republic, were new features of the Memorial day exercises here. There will be one tablet each In the city and Mountain View cemeteries, where services were held. Dlx-Loga- Nephl. Mona school was declared t and cleanest school In the the Juab school district and . waa awarded the prize of $15 by the board of education at Its regular meeting. According to the rules of the contest, this money Is to be spent on playground equipment James H. Wallis, who Inspected the Mona school, paid a high compliment to the neatness displayed by the students and on the work of the janitor. Ogden. T. Gajeksky, a furrier and taxidermist, was sentenced to pay a fine of $200 and serve sixty days in jail by Judge John A. Hendricks of the city court after his conviction by a jury on a charge of having four beaver hides In his possession, without being properly tagged by the state commissioner, to show that they bad been lawfully commrtted to him. best-kep- , Salt Lake Down City. at Locker-be- In San Juan county lives a man who only recently ascertained that there was a law upon the statute books that requires the payment of a tax on gasoline. He knows better now for the secretary of state has called his attention to the fact that he owes the state more than $250 taxes on the thirty-tw- o barrels of gasoline that he has sold during the past two years. ' Salt Lake City. Members of the newspaper fraternity whose assignment has placed them In close touch with the warden of the Utah state prison, James Devlng, during his. more than four years' Incumbency of the office, were his guests at a dinner at the prison. But one person outside of the "press gang waa present, that being Judge Stewart of the state board ot corrections. , Salt Lake City. A manufacturing plant of the Griffin Wheel company of Chicago, $12,000,000 subsidiary company ot the American Steel Foun-dorlcorporation, will be established In Salt Lake, the first unit to he completed near the end of tbe year, according to a telegram received from R. P. Lamont, president of the company, by President Frank B. Cook of the chamber ot commerce. es Logan. Merchants men of Logan are and In favor business ot contin- uing the Sunday picture shows, to action taken at a recent meeting of 142 representatives ot business concerns In the city. By a vote of 100 to 42 the business men Indicated their desire to see the shows continued. Ogden. Dr. A. 3. Fout adjutant, was elected delefates to the annual convention of the Disabled American Veterans of the World War, from Weber Chapter No. 4. n. K. Rice commander ot the local chapter, was made adjutant Froro. Mapleton and Sprtngvlllr farmers, who realize the menace ot white top, noxious weed, to the success of their farms, have just purchased a carload or salt, which will be spread over the Infested areas, to C. J, Sorenson, district agricultural Inspector. t . |