OCR Text |
Show r With your Home paper reaching you regularly you are certain not to miss any good things offered. 011 tbo cm 'About the wo know of art some men offer ing their Home fr ts, ii VOLUME XLHI. HYLAN S LOGAN CITY, CACHE COUNTY, UTAH, MONDAY, MARCH 27, 1922. SCORES BEET PRICES flfiE THE CAPTURE OF nr A I EE r u ; - a uniofi: FUNERAL SERVICE FOR GEORGE F. LOS ANGELES " NUME GEORGE F. CHECKETTS OHIO NS 1 O) PROSPERITY New York Mayor States That Independent Men Are Needed For Next Presidential Election in 1924 to Meet Coming Problems. Contracts Upon. (By Associated Press) CHICAGO, Mar. 27 Mayor By Farmers Will Realize a Return in Proportion to ThaL of The Price of Sugar Is Agreed Someof The Events Erectionof Monuments The Anthracit Workers to Early Pioneers to Be Committee To Attempt s' Started Noted Battles to Avert The President To For Capture of City to E. E. Calvin, V Ice Presi- of The Long and Useful Life of The Departed Was Among With The Early Settlers of Cache dent of The Union Pacific System Arrives la Salt Lake And TaH:3 On Improvement la Strike-Illinoi- Be Marked by Various Pow-Wo- w Statues. Business Valley. Operators PROVIDENCE, Mar. 25. (By Associated Press) (By Associated Press) Funeral services for the late LOS ANGELES, Mar., 27. NEW March 27. The YORK, F. Hylan of New York in a The historic though not very labor members of the anthracite George F. Checketts were held speech last night declared that March 24th in the Second Ward bloody battles which proceedreinvisible government, reprechapel with Counselor W. B. ed the capture of Los Angeles wage' scale sented by Rockefeller, and the by American forces under com- turned from Cleveland to renew Low in charge. Standard Oil interests and a Elder Fred C. Rossiter offermand of Commodor- e- Stockton negotiations with the operators ed group of international bankers the invocation and Bishop and General in 1847 in an effort to avert the strike Kearney was menacing the United South- called for Saturday. Demanding Joseph Cambell pronounced the to are in niche have their States Government. In his benediction. ern Californias history assur-re- d a twenty per cent increase in speech, given before a large The choir sang, Nearer Dear monuerection of the by body of Knights of Columbus, the miners say they pro- Savior to Thee," When Shall wages, where ments the sites marking he criticised the ratification of the engagements were fought pose to demonstrate that wages We Meet Thee, and Shall We the four power pacific treaty by Meet Beyond The River." . Miss according to plans announced by in mines failed to keep pace with the senate and referring to the SomeElelyn Hansen sang, YBouth-erof Historical the in Society other industries the wages next presidental election declartime Well Understand and a Califoma. ed that independent men were duet was given very beautifully during the war. Spots for the monuments needed in the race for the office by Alma and Hazen Mathews. selected were by the society, ( By Associated Press) facturer. of chief executive. The speakers who paid just The new contract Is practical following s report by Percival -S- PRINGFIELD lll.r Mar. cting tribute trthgTnBmeryf "the Charles and J. Cooney, author, upon his promise to the were: Richard Stir-lanly the same as that of 1921 ex- J. Prudhomme LOCALS descendant of a coal operators President Frank departed exH. C. Hickman, Alma is that farmer the cepting who California family, Farmington df the Illinois union H. B. Cambell and W. WOODMEN ATTENTION It pected to realize a greater re- pioneer made an investigation concern- miners wired the presidents of Mathews, B. Low. The turn. price ranges upward is desired that every member battlethree coal operators associaon a sliding scale as high as the ing the location of the OBITUARY possible shall attend the funeral . tions of Illinois that he would grounds of is to and go Checketts. eldest child sugar likely George to be held tomorrow ot our good price The first cf the battles which meet them in conference Wedfriend and Neighbor, Judge A. as an example it is cited that w'ill be commemorated by the nesday, He said he had not be- of Charles and Eliza Sherwood A. Law. Every member is re- sugar selling for $8.50 a bag monuments was the Battle of lieved the conference would re- Checketts, was born June 30, a ton for would realize quested to meet in the lodge beets. The $9.43content in all San Gabrial which occurred sult in a separate wage scale for 1848 in Upton, Snodbury, EngThe family consisted of sugar room at 1 oclock p. m. near Montebello on January 7, the Illinois miners at this time. land. 18 per cent. be should beets sons and one daughter. eleven will go they date was the anni When his parents joined-t- he Ephraim Bergesolt; prEStdent 1847, Ths to the residence, accompanying Mar. 27. INDIANAPOLIS, the state farm bureau and versary of the Battle of New. With church they had a strong desire the remains frem the home to of plans complete for & to of the sugar beet com- Orleans, and Commodore Stock-tochairman emigrate to Zion, jbut it was coal the Tabernacle, where services union t strike, so informed his men. The nationwide his last mittee, for all tot' come at expressed night impossible Folm. 2. awaited the development are to be held at p. satisfaction with, the Battle of San Gabriel is said to leaders so the family first , saved thorough once, the of dedication in k the for the lowing complete program terms of, the contract, saying: be the only engagement recordthe countrys coal indus sufficient td Send George, t.who grave the Woodmen will give 1922 contract , has the ed in American history ft) which tieupof The in 1868. ..and obtaining their (Call, to 200,000 came their funeral ritual for departindorsement of the: farid a general of the',, army served try' thoughminers: work in hearty Wyoming, made such td join a half ed neighbors bureau officials. We believe that tinder a commodore of thfe naVy. use 6t his tipie and saved good million union minejvorkej-- April so a contract that U fair to About 70(1 American infantry- 1. Within each it ' tarefuliy that within a year field it is underManager Wv R.' Sloan- - of the thejsfarmers and fair to the men, drawn up' in a hallow he had enough to emigrate his sugar Logan Hardware comafiny, has stood off the charges of wood that the union already has father and the next elder son, contract is square, a that companies, just Denver. from Colorado, in returned organizers who have been Reuben. Following his every respect and merits the the enemys calvary, after hav-n- many example, enrolled as whci e as a representative of the employed. the three within another bombarded first with ben of beet the of support growers year 1 AssociaWinchester National Utah. had earned and saved sufficint artllery. The Americans . were tion he went to attend a conto send for the rest of the large It is the hope of the farm said to have lost three men killvention of Winchester dealers ed. The other casualties, were PACKER'S family the mother and eight bureau will that the growers Colorado and Wyoming. Reports listed as about a dozen bruis(children, who arrived in the fall contract will and the proaccept is business generally were that of 1870, at which time the famduce the beets required for the ed. improving and dealers were the Battle of San Following ily settled at Croydon, in Morin of this factories, support weather quite hopeful. The continuAmericans the county. Gabriel, gan The vastly important industry. was mild and farmers are putPrior to leaving England Geo. ed their advance until they has been reached agreement only While there ting in their crops. Checketts had becomq engaged after closest study of the inter- reached Huntington Park. Los . he .metC, D. W. Fullmer, ter Jemima Tsylorrtd"Whom. In Here the Battle of Of the" growers and of the Angeles. ests who is conducting a hardware 1871, he sent money for her and it is with real the Mesa was fought. The Amstore in Colorado; also E. E. industry, that and on her arrival were emigration and ambushed ericans we able are a after pleasure Richards, a member cf the pio- month of deliberations and meet- again charged with cavalry. they were married Nov. 16, (By Associated Press) neer Richards family of Utah, ings to announce the success of This time no Americans were CHICAGO, March 27. Louis 1871 by the Bishop at Henefer, v ho has a store at Ray, Colora- the killed, although a larger num- F. Swift Jr., son of the meat directly after which they moved negotiations. do. t Wyoming, Creep Rivefr, ber was bruised. packer is free on a bond but to this engagement, scheduled to appear Friday be- where he was in the employ of Following Dr. W. G. Ruckenbrod has Fan Galore Makes company. A year . the Americans triumphantly fore the Police Magistrate at the U. P. Ry. relurnedrom"rthe Shriners entered Los Angeles by way of Evanston on a charge of. driving later they moved to EvanBton, suffered convention in Salt Lake, greatly Foolish Age Hit the district now known as Boyle an autpmobile while intoxicated. Wyoming." where theytheir two enthused over the prospects of Swift was arrested early yes- many trials, burying located in the north Heights, pucccss of the big El Kalah section of the present terday after his automobile had eldest children who died of dipeastern collided with another car. He htheria. w'ithin a few days of The most desirable thing in city. Circus, Mardi Gras and Indus- trial Exposition to be held at the wtrci totlay ig a laugh The A number of cannon balls em- was held four hours at the each other. Not long afterward Bonneville Park. - Salt - Lake man or woman who can make ployed by the native California Evanston police station until a they were called to part- - with Willia m, tpre?en ted a another. March 3 to April 8, two sessions be troops in their efforts to- halt brother,. Swift it whether the laugh, public the inThis conference denied includes bond. $200 TrilS74,' with'hfs'fathers daily. the advance of the forces under week and the shows the Doctor a full grown roar or a scarcely Commodore Stockton and Gen- toxication charge and said the family, George and Mrs. I etts moved to this thinks will be so irresistibly audible titter possesses an asset eral Kearney are now in the pos- accident was due to city, where endured pavement. many they hardships, good that people will want to of no mean value. session of the historical society. after which they moved back to take them all in. The object is Of all the young women film They are said to have been made to raise means to send the stars now Evanston, and remaining for natcavorting on the silver from copper stills, as the several years. Shriner Band of forty and the no method had for ives casting Shriner patrol of sixty, to at- screen probably none is so pro- iron balls. Returning in 1883 they located on Providence bench and suftend the national Shriner con- ficient at getting the laughs" The exact spots where the vention in Los Angeles, Calif- as Miss Doris May, the vivac battles were fered the hardships incident to fought were locatornia beginning June 9th. The ious young star who appears in ed by a number developing a farm from a saye-hruold Califorof a Hunt Utah Delegation will widely ad- The Foolish Age, desert; but being most inroamed who the country nians, dustrious vertise Utah and. her manifold Stromberg production released hereabouts in their .younger and a good mechanic AgHiMiated Press) (By Pictures and now being the soon had a home and attractions including the Logan by family KANSAS CITY, Mar. 27. days. canyon route to the Yellowstone, screened at the Lyric Treatre. The campaign which endect in Cattle receipts 14,500. Beef at one time he owned and operand induce as many as possible The Foolish Age" marks the the conquest of Los Angeles steers dull. Few early sales 15 ated a sawmill, aided by his cf the eastern people to travel first starring vehicle in which followed the collapse of the cents to 25 cents lower. Best held sons, at the mouth of Spring e nhlsrway-beforCreek reuraing'1roTne: Miss May" h ar Flag Republic, estab - tabove $8.25. He was the father of star in her own right. Hereto lished the MarGenerbefore Hogs Receipts 10,000. by year Funeral services for the late fore she has been known as a al four and occurred two ket opened slow. Bulk of later children, six sons and Fremont, been Mary Christian Hansen were with Douglas MacLean years before the rush to Calif- sales fairly active, mostly 10 i daughters, and there have 7 heud in the Third ward chapel in their inimitable series of co-- ornia of the The grandchildren. cents to 15 cents lower than lastthlrty-tw- i "' and Hours medies such as hajj yesterday afternoon, A weeks close, Bulk of sale$$9.25 surviving children are: William Anklet n. Ltaverand Mary Henry.. Checketts.,. of Levan; to $9.75r M rs. Rose . Peterson and Mrs. other musical numbers were Recognizing in Miss May a MarSheep Receipts 15,000. vocal solos by Frank H. Baugh young woman " of undoubted Lizzie Scothem, of Trempnton; ket steady. Lambs strong. Chaales and Andrew Checketts pnd Esther Peterson. The open- charm and talent and a favorite IS NOW 130,770,000 , of Weston, Idaho; Arthur ing praver was offered by Elder with' thousands upon thousands Those Hubbard. who IRISH FREE STATE i Checketts of Providence and W. theatre-goers of James country the told of the excellent life and de- over. R-- Pictures engaged her Raymond Checketts of Californ(By Associated Press) brothers are: MOSCOW! voted service of their denarted to appear in a series of producMar., 27. The BILL IS PASSED BY ia. His surviving of Castle Checketts Charles of excluding! sistbr were: Elders Wilhelm tions as a Russia, the population star, Gate; Henry Checketts of Salt Kowallis, Richard E. Yeates, W. first o fwhich is The Foolish Siberia. is 130,707,000 according HOUSE OF LORDS Lake; W'illiam Checketts of R. Durrant, John Quayle and Age. Adv. to recent estimates. The town Providence and Heber CheckW. G. is and city population Pres. Lindquist Bishop put at etts of Ogden. A happy family (Br Evans tendered the' thanks to tion was pronounced by Elder 16 per cent. Pre) 4 ' Irish Mar. The 27 D. had all been to who LONDON, and the at party assembled at the family the- family Roy Thatcher, home Nov. 16 last to celebrate bill Free third1 the State cemeterv writdurbeen novel was has dedicatand the finer passed No grave sympathetic helpful the r Etd-House and final of golden wedding of Mr. and and the in of N. ten Hansen illness David in ears. ed reading following Chicago Evening by ing he Mfs. Chkctto. .At that-timLords JV-- r. benedicof the departed. , death . . . i (Special Dispatch) LAKE, Mar. 27. A contract based on the , principles of he sliding scale, under which farmers will receive for beets a price based upon the manufacturers price for sugar, was agreed upon by the sugar beet committee workers of the Utah state farm bureau and represeno and tatives of the Amalgamated- - sugar companies at a conference held here Saturday. The division is to be made on the basis of extraction in the ratio of 46.5 percent to the farmer and 53.5 per cent to the manuSALT , Utah-Idah- n :j ntSJ! hale and hearty. Mr. Checketts bade fair to live for a number of years, but bronchial pneumonia proved too much. He lied and died a faithful Latter-Da- y Saint, and at the time of his death was a High Priest. HU death was the fifth to occur in the Checketts ' family four adulU and one child, within a period of two months. 27-A- Daughter-Find- s tomor-when- ce n non-uni- on s g non-uni- Father After Search of 18 Years (By Aiitoclated Presa) Colo V Mar. LONGMONT, a 7. ' - -- - ,. sh R-- C New.-York- C d AuMM-fate- - ( e, - - . 4 Home building activities will" be the first to pick up Mr. Cal- vin said yesterday. Already It , R :t TO GIVE UP SAYINGS (By AMoclated v have overreached their bond" . ing limit. The unemployment ' situation is gradually working' itself dut, and by the middle of the summer may, be a thing of the past, Mr. Calvin said. He is of - tin opinion that Utah will shortly feel the effect of ' the higher... prices of wool and sheep, and with the gradual opening of mines and smelters this state ; will be in excellent condition by ' tmhe time the fall season arriv-- . , Press) LOS ANGELES, Mar, deputies are searching for five men and one woman, yesterday reported to have .tor. tured with red hot Irons, Mike Kapalinich, a storekeeper at Compton, forcing him to reveal the hiding place of his savings escaping with $110 in cash and ' f , $125 in stock. Kapalonishs con- es. We been accustomed have to. dition is serious, though . the . physicians said he would re- quick upward and downward turns, he said, but any turns' cover. " in business in either direction;' from now on will be gradual., Mr. Calvin does not look for any , Father Pleased With downward turn, he said unless should come as a result . of Faculty Action That it' the impending coal miners strike.-T- he coal situation, ha Reprimanded His Son said. Is likely to throw the coun-tr. y M M back Avbere It .was e9f'SZOi .8 year ago. The Union Pacific has" for such an emergency prepared 3eo. (By Associated Press) CHICAGO, Mar. 27c Umon Pacififc coa! 01mstead,.one of the twenty- - iljf, Wyoming having from six Williams College Students 90 days supply of coal on for making expelled recently the last issue of the college hand. , Mr. Calvin was ' optimistic; paper, too snappy" is home in yesterday-ovethe general bus!- Evanston, but without a parentat blessing. The father said he nAss outlook in this section, and was glad the faculty had repri saw nothing to hinder a gradual . , recovery of business, with the manded the student. Young Olmstead said two car- exception of the coal situation. . toons aioused the professors ire and admitted there were some LEGION AUXILIARY some suggestive jokes." r x TO MEET TOMORROW Favors The auxiliary of Logan Post the American Legion No Alliance No. 7 of will hold its weekly- - meeting afternoon at 3 o'clock forty-niners.- full-fledge- boom. has begun in the east, end it has resulted in lifting the lumber industry out of its sluep.' There is prospect for ,a heavy traffic movement in lumbri,'bj . i' iff said. Mi1. Calvin, say a he I noticed falling off in hUh' RED HOT IRONS ARE construction in recent wt'J;. due he believes, largely to tha USED TO INDUCE!, IAN fact .that many communities co-st- ar , ( tn French Government - O 27-H- enry Platow and daughter Clara have been reunited after eighteeiryears.-Th- e father and mother separated when' Clara was three months old and the mother later died. Clara located her father a few days ago by writing directory, publishers , in various citierf aha found' hiih: id MEAT, Jr SAL LAKE, Mar, 27. Prosperous times are coming back to Utah and the west but not with a rush, in the opinion of E. E. Calvin, vice president, in charge of operation, of the Union Pacific System, who arrived in Sait lake yesterday. , Mr Calvin is here to meet Judge R, S. Lovett .chairman of the board .of the Union Pacific and President Carl R. Gray. Judge Lovett is on his annual inspection trip of the system and is due in Salt Lake Tuesday evening." He ad Mr. Gray will not stop here on the way west, but will spend at least one day in Salt Lake on their,way east. Mr. Calvin said there is a noticable improvement in business conditions throughout th i country, and particularly on the lines of the Union PPacific, where freight traffic is picking -up. He does not anticipate a rapid resumption of business but one that will be gradual, and which, when it reaches its ' height cannot be construed a 1 d, - ; t (By AsnocUted ARIS;Marr27: Pros) " TliffFrerichiiTnfiheChaffibtr-tUtiw-""government will approve of an'merce assembly. All eligible are Invited to be pres ' adoption by the French ment of a no alliance resolu- - ent and place application for tion of thef our power Pacific membership. ' treaty adopted by the United . E. R. Owen will give a talk ta States it was said in ' official (he women of the auxiliary, a circles. ft he necessity of .organization. .Other important business wiJ (come up for discusion inchiir Wheat and Corn further plans for the biy j celebration and festival, f ' r Br Aim ( ot Ittfsd press ) .Legion post and thp CHICAGO. March May .to take place, next Fri $1.32 7;K. May com!31 at the Chamber ee assembly. $(,5 , parlia-jwom- en j' ! i 1 27-wh- eat ' ' |