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Show --J 'v ' ' ; THE BINGHAM NEWS, BINGHAM. UTAII ' v 7 .... ; ...'.,...;,-- , 73 WWi-- 41 i V.Ul& '. rEifi I " . 'W 1 Italian model for mother airship, designed to curry and launch airplanes, soon to bo built by United State. J British troops arriving In Constantinople to curb the over-ambitio- Turks. 8 Gen. Alberto Salinas, second to command to the Mexican rebel leader Murguia, who has been captured nnd sentenced to seven years' Imprison-ment ' ' NEWS REVIEW OF CURRENT EVENTS British Tories Quit Coalition and Lloyd George and His Cabinet Resign. BOHR Lfi'.V TO EE FREEER America's Attempt to Dry Up the Sas Meets With Various Kinds of Opp-ositionDoings of the Ameri-can Legion Convention. seizure by our dry navy of a Cnnndlan schooner eight miles oft the New st France, Holland, Italy, nnd perhaps other countries, are only awaiting the necessity of contesting the right of the United States to en-force a ruling that will mean eltlmr that their seamen will be deprived of the dally allotment of wine guaranteed them by their laws or that their ves-sels must refrain from entering Ameri-can waters. In addition to these embnrrussments. the government Is being told that the trade of our Insular possessions, espe-cially the Philippines and Porto Rico, will suffer greatly If foreign vessels carrying liquor are barred from enter-ins- ; their ports. Secretary of War Weeks is espoclnlly Insistent on this point, and it Is said to be likely the government will follow his suggestion nnd ask congress speedily to revise the Volstead act so that the ruling of the the other band, a Down-Ens- t post of the legion, composed of former ma-rines, has dissolved because It believed the legion hikI another organization of veterans were being used for political purposes by their members. OEVERAL recent victories by the Ked army in eastern Siberia over the White Russians have caused great deal of apprehension In that re-gion. The Reds ure odvnneing on Vladivostok with the evident Intention of occupying It as soon as the Japanese evacuate the city. More serious Is the threat of the Reds against the Chinese Eastern raiiwoy, toward which other columnn of the soviet army are mov-ing. Gen. Chang Tso Lin, the Munchn-Ha-n military lender. Is prepared to re-sist the Reds end, if necessary, will make an alliance with the White Rus-sians. The Moscow government , has demanded that China cease aiding the White forces by permitting them to concentrate In Chinese territory for on Siberian soil . By EDWARD W. PICKARD 1 PRESIDENT HARDING, In t letter addressed to Secretary of Agriculture Wallace, to be t read at a Republican meeting, said: "Agricultural production Is t very nearly restored, taking the world as a whole; but agricul-tural prices are so low that it is apparent to all of us that the farmer ts not being eompen-"sated.- " Asserting that the ad-ministration has done all In Its pewer to restore the balance be-tween prices and costs of pro-duction, he said the trend is "strongly toward better condl- - tions for the farmer." Do you and the farmers of your acquaintance agree In this with Presldert Harding? t government In Great COALITION gone to smash. Lloyd George has resigned ns prime minister and his entire cabinet Is out. A. l'.o-na- r Law has been asked by the kln to form a new concert utlvc minis' ry. Lloyd George hr.'3 promptly begun a fight to regain power as chief of a new party. The Rritlsli are enterlns on the most exeltlng political contest they have had fur ninny years. A cnll for a general election Is expected shortly. The downfall oi" the coalition minis-try uas brought nhout when the con-servative otherwise tory or union 1st members of parliament and of the cshln't. In caucus ut the Carleton dub. dK-lde- theft- - party should go to the country as un Independent MOSCOW also Is taking a firm concerning the coming Neur East pence conference. The so-viet government says If It is not rep resented In that conference any results of It will be of no efTect, and It espe-cially protests against Its exclusion If Rumania and Jugo-Slavi- a partlch pate. Russia supports fully all th Turkish claims on frontiers and fo sovereign rights on tho coasts of the straits, opposes any control of the straits by the League of Nations or by mandate, and declares for absolute freedom of commerce In the straits. Large numbers of the refugees from Thrace, chiefly Armenians, entered Bulgaria the early part of Inst week, and on Thursday the Bulgarlnn fron-tier wns closed to them. Half a mil-lion of the fugitives are In Macedonia, lacking shelter, food and clothing. French troops In considerable numbers are arriving In Thrace to preserve or-der, and In some places, notably Adrl-nnopl- e, a big part of their task Is to prevent the Greeks from burning th city and slaughtering the Moslems be-fore they depart PREMIER FACTA of Italy api withstood the de-mands of the FnsctstI that he and his cabinet resign. The ministry refused to yield and Facta made an unexpect-ed allowing of strength, llenlto Mus-soll.i- l, leader of the Fascists was so impressed with this that It was said he would Instruct his followers, at their great gathering In Naples this week, to refrain from causing the any more trouble. Gabrlele D'Aiinunzlo. the soldier-poe- t, hat signed an agreement with Mussolini establishing common action between their forces. PORTLAND, ORE., doesn't propose by "wobblles." Learn-ing that thoupunds of numbers of the Industrial Workers of the World were gathering there to participate In the waterfront strike, the city council ap-propriated funds for a lot of extra po- - attorney general may be modified. Mr. Hughes' note to Great Rrltaln, fuggesting extension of the right of search dcult especially with liquor-smugglin- g operations. In reply, Am-bassador Geddes said his government was doing and would do all It could to prevent such smuggling, but that It has consistently opposed any extension of the limit of territorial waters and "do not feel that they can properly ac-quiesce, In order to meet a temporary emergency, In the abandonment of a principle to which they attach great Importance, THOUSANDS of former service men In New Orleans, taking port In the fourth annual con-vention of the American Legion, nnd they hod as guests a number of much-decorat-heroes from the uilled na-tions nnd some distinguished American civilians. It was a lively gathering anil woke up the old Crescent city. Moreover, it did and snld and heard some things that nre likely to have ef-fect on governlnental and congression-al action. Naturally the bonus, or, as the legfon members prefer to call It, the adjusted ccmrwtlon, came In for much illscusshm. This wits very one-sided, however, for the organization as a whole was decidedly In favor of the bonus, and a resolution, strongly word-ed, wss sdopted declaring that the men who fought the war were tfhderpald and thnt there should be on adjust-ment. Frmer Judge Landlx, In a fiery speech, upheld this view ami wns wild-ly cheered. Col. A. A. Sprague, chairman of the legion's rehabilitation commission, sub-mitted a report severely criticizing the government's achievements In that line to date and excoriating Individual con-gressmen and senators. "The story of hospltnl cirtistructlon by the govern-ment up to date," the report declared, "Judging by actual results. Is a tragedy for the sick, n discredit to the govern-ment and an affront to the American Legion. There Is not a redeeming fea-ture In It politics, promises, plans, failure to prepare anything but alibis In advance, red tape, excuses nnd con-tentions conspired to defeat the actual providing of r.ceded beds." President Harding's delay In the matter of pinning commit-tees on rehabilitation tu various dis-tricts was the subject . comment Thursday the cunventiou after an exciting delmte adopted n resolution demanding the removal from office of General Sawyer, of the federal hospitalization bocrd. The vote wns 001 to IlTl On Wednesday the to; r.r.d their parade, rnd if was a big one. Some ten thousand oi them were In ilnr nnd they hnd 23 military hands. 2:5 drum corps, lots of tiiidtri nnd Hosts mid Mays and standards, !!!. above tl.ein circled two squadroiiS of nil ph'.nen and tn!:ti- seaplanes. Gct'crnl I'er'diiru: arri.cd In New Orleans ii Tlmrsday and whk given a rousing weleo;r,e. Ir was said lie was particularly pleaded with the re-port of the military affwlrs committee, adopted by tho convention, calling for the drafting of Industry and lubor in the event of war. One of i lie distinguished guest of the convention vwis to huve been Col. C. II, Forbes, director o the federal veterans' bureau. lie went, with his staff, but departed almost at onre, e, according to report, the support-ers of one of the candidates for the position of national commander charged thgt he wus sent flute by President Taring to play politics. On psrty. and. If elected, choose a con-servative premier. This actlevi was taken against the protests of Austen Chamberlain, their leader, and In ac-cordance with the advice of A. Kor.nr Law, hitherto a staunch supporter of Lloyd George. It was precipitated by an election In Wales which wns won, surprisingly, by the Mnserviiflve er.u-dldnt- At Mils writing It Is not certain that B'nr will attempt to form a ministry, but he nmhahly will do so. and If Is taken for granted that all Its members will M conservatives ex-cept Lord Grey. wi0 will be ofTercd the post 'of minister for foreign af-fairs. The life of this uiinistry will be short. As Is snld nbew Lloyd George has not qnlt the fight. He delivered d hot tpeech nt Ieods Saturday nnr! several others oi his way there, and mode it plain thnt lie won't "'take his punlsh- - Uce and the mayor ordered Immediate raids. Between two and three hun-dred men were arrested and held on charges of vagrancy. It was said the I. W. W. pluu contemplated the swannlng of 23,000 members of the to Portland an other Pa-cific ecu st points. WORLD'S records went by the Irt the ovlat'on races uf Mount Clernuis, Mich. Lieut. It. I, Mn:ighan of the army won tln PuMtzei trowhy, and later set a new si.eed rec-ord of 2'S fi i:l! an hen.-- 'th the si.mo plane. This was not considered cfuch.i. lieoni'f no official of the Fed-eration Acroritiultque Internationale was on onf. but later (Sen. William Mitchell, ussl'-tai'.- r chief of the army air service, took the sate machine and drove It nt a speed of It4.or miles un hour before official observers. Our Jack with dirigibles continues bad. I.ust v. ok the big army balloon ;;!, which hud tnud the trip from coast to eout, was destroyed ut Sun Antonio. Tex,, on Its return Journey, While being taken fnm the hangar ! was f;t ruck by a high v!ud and its gaf bag was ripped. Explosion and tiro resulted. Several members of t.-- crew were Injured, but ull esrapnc diath, ment lying down." IP; has the nu-cleus of n ,.jw and strong party in such conservative leaders n Lord Bal-four. Austen Chaiiiherinln, Lord P,!r- - TVortWngton Mckix and oth-- ; era who l.ve by liii-- i U thN crisis. It '"l be :i f'iirt.v of niod-- ! rntes and I .iy lm culleil J.e cen'rr or national party. J.NCI.K SAM tn the se pn.hiht-flo- n enforcer Is not tun. tig things nil his own way on tt" ".e-i- Federal Judge Lent nod Hand In New York, after bearing Arguments In rhc suit brought by foreign and Amrienn. ship-ping companies to njd flic United States government from enforc'itg the ruling of Attorney General Daugherty. reserved his decision and extended the temporary restraining order. The Brit-ish government bus rejected thu pro-posal of Secretary Knghes for a treuty to extend the right of search of ves-sels up to twelve miles off shore, and Uas formally protested against the ' ., - . t , WASHINGTON There are twenty-thre- e women seek-ing "oats la congress at the elections next month. Twenty-on- e are candi-dates for the house of representative and two for the senate. All have men opopsed to them anti all are making an active campaign. Ocean steamers which sailed from foreign ports Monday for the United States faced the necessity of carefully computing the amount of alcoholic beverages on board against the mile-ag-shown by the ship's dally log. The last stein and decanter must be emp. tied before the ship rroeses the three-mil-e line. i The state department made pnbl! Monday plans for the evacuation of the Dominican republic by American military forces and announced that a proclamation had been agreed to by which a provisional government would be established. ' Federal reserve banks have been authorized by Secretary Mellon, It was announced nt the treasury, to re-deem In cash, before December IP. treasury certificates off Indebtedness of series TD 1922, dated December 15, 1021, and series TD2 1922, dated June 1 1922, and both maturing December 15, 1922. Adoption of the pending resolution propoBlns a constitutional amendment putting an eml to the Issuing of securities will "be urged upon congress at Its short session It has been stated by Jilgh fiscal officers of the amiulstratlon. They declared t;ie question of tax-fre- e fconds was the most important, not alone of the na-tional tax problems, but of some of the industrial oneB as well. Associate Justice William H. Day of the supreme court, has decided c!e finitely to resign from the bench, in view of his duties us umpire in the German-America- n claims negotiations. Prediction that congress will be call ad in special session ubJiit November 20, was made by Representative Cam. bell, Republican, of Kansas, after n conference with I'resident Harding. Fire losses on railroads In this conu-r-declined nearly $3,000,000 in 1921, ns compared with 1920. The interstate .ommerce commis-sion soon will pass on the. application of the Los Angeles & Salt Rail-road company for authority to build a thlrty-two-mil- e line in Iron county, Utah, from Lund, on its main line, tC Cedar City. The administration, It was declared on high authority, will In all pr Mmbl-llt-send recommendations to con-gress for revisions of the Volstead net which will modify the s'tuatlon re-sulting from the attorney general's rocent ruling regaining foreign ships and the United States prohibition law. FOREIGN Serious property u.'.inago and tl.e loss of at least one life by forest fire , wus reported from Holdar, Canada, abut seventy miles northwest of Ed-monton. , . No general election for many years lias presented such unpredictable prob-lems for solution. One of the weekly reviews declares that it will turn upon the simple question of for or against Lloyd Goor.w, and therefore will be n purely personal contest. In the near future every shift of coal miners will take down into the mine and hang up la the level where they work an instrument which can bo set to sound un alarm, by bell or horn, at any percentage figure of admixture of coal gas or firedamp. KMfflOF THE M WEEK A Complete Hwtorjr of WhatHw Bra Happening Throughout die World ' WESTERN Th tBianta commerce eommls-ak-at Washington head that the pro-posed advance In rates on Iron and ateel In carloads from Midvale, Utah, to points la California, from T5 cents to $1.08 par hundred pounds, is not justified, and canceled the proposed new schedules which would bare gone Into affect November 22. About 200,000 acres of land in New Mexico, Washington and Wyoming were classified under the stock-raisin- g homestead law and were designa-ted for entry in tracts of 640 acres r less through the geological survey In September, ttiev interior department has announced. What old-tim- e residents here de-- ' clared was the largest funeral within their recollection took place in St. Joseph Mo. when the body of Nellie Hals, girl killed by a shot supposedly fired by police. The formal opening of the Los Angeles Union Stock Tnrds Co. is scheduled to take place on Wednes-day, November 1. When the opening j tikes place there will be many cars ; of livestock from Wyoming, Colorado, i New Mexico, Nevada and California there, much of which formerly went t: East , Property valued tt approximately I f 1,000 was stolen from a box car on i the Western Pacific railroad en route from Wendover to Salt Lake. Tho Society of American Indiisns, meeting In Kansas City was to take up the Question of enfranchisement of members of their race. Uniformity in the laws governing motor vehicles will reault from the meeting of the motor vehicle officials of Urn mountain and coast states, which waa held In Portland, Ore. Of 17 western states, 16 have suffl clont feed to carry sheep and cattle through the winter, according to a re-port made public by statisticians of the United States department of agri-culture. The single exception is New Moxlco, J GENERAL A plan to raise a fund of not less than $5,000,000 from firms and corpor-ations that profited most during the war for the relief of needy e men ami their tamllies during the coming winter was announced Monday i by a theatrical manager In Chicago. The Harvard committee on economic ' research hus no expectation of a drop In prices to the prewar level during i the next ten years. I Alvin M. Owsley of Teaxs was j elected national commander of the American Legion. Two of the men whose testimony resulted In freeing Thomas J. Walsh, btiisuess agent of the sheet metal workera' union, f the murder of two mn last December, have confessed they concocted the story of a "myster-ious stranger" dashing Into the Weln. stuho, klllng the two men and rush-ing out Mrs. Hazel McNally, declared by aer huslmnd to he the mother uf MdollbnbyM twins, was freed of a charge of murder when the Judge ruled the state had failed to prove the infants are still alive. tn a large collection of books re-cently presented the Cambrldgo, Mass. municipal library by a woman donor, whose iiientlty Is fcelag kpt ssciet, has been discovered an edition of the Rible nearly 400 years old and now-value-ut $100,000. Word was received of the death of James Lewis Cowlea, well-knw- n writer on postal and railroad problems, at Richmond, Va. Mr. Cowles was knmvn us the father of the parcel poat A strange, almost hysterical rel'g lous cuthuslnsm Is rising In the Welsh village.1). In the towns of the Aber valley, in Swcnsea and other parts of South Wales, crowds in churches and on street comers are praying, slnj.. lng and shouting Hallelujah. Hun-dreds of corners huve already been bnptlred and their number mounts daily. The SnlUm'a government has beta soundly snirbbed by the first dlcmltarj' of tho Turkish nationalist government to arrive here since Mustapha Kemul Pasha' army consolidated. Mexicans, who during a period of disturbance, uttack foreigners or their property, nre tobe registered ns trai-tors and dealt with accordingly, under a measure submitted to the Klepnrt-raen- t Dr. Lyman Abhott,editor-in-ch- l f of of interior hy President Ohregon. tho Outlook, with which he had boon associated nearly forty years; clergy man, lawyer, author and successor n Henry Ward P.eecher 88 pastor of Ply-mouth church, Brooklyn has died. Twenty-on- e alleged communists, ar. rested ns a result of n raid on a meet-ing held In the sand hills twenty nHer south of St. Joseph, Mich, last August were arraigned, charged with violating 'he Michigan nntisyndlcnlism law. A hound that lost her litter of pups has iidoptod five motherless piggies to mine tit IVina, 111. The piggies nnd puppies were born in adjoining stalls j f a Iwrn at aliont the same time. The mother hog died nt about the same time that the pups mysteriously disappeared. The dog mourned her puppies for a day and then adopted the IKter of pigs. The pigs take their ainner with grunts f natlsfutcion and the hound guards them as Jauloutly u though they were her pups. i Peking is alarmed over the nat'oral aspect of thft oil nation In Fu!a"n pro-vince, vh ?e capital, Foochow, recent-- I ui'B raptured by forces op;osd to the central republic. Large crowds the glid ti'--! competitions nt Itford bill F.ng! md witnessed a flight of 1 hour an ! minutes by Captain V. J. Ua. i Hu In a craft of British iiiarnifu-tur- H. The announcement that the Nation-n- n Unionist association hi3 l.isinM a summons f. r an emergency .:nircn-- I of the party dropped with a hi g In-t-the trou'de:! poip.lcal nr-n.- t nnd made everybody Jump. After boldlnr the office of p.--! r.t minister through seven of t!:e nict critical years of British historytlTR- - years of war and four years of n construction David Lloyd 'SAr?. went into the wlWorness. News Notes From All Part of Soldier 8ummlt-T- ha strike situa-tion on the Denver k.i Rio Grand Western railroad has not been fully settled, according to an injunction suit filed with the clerk of the United States district court The suit, which was filed by Joseph H. Young, receiv-er for the railroad, seeks to enjoin the activities of the strikers at Salt Lake, Green River, Helper and Soldier Sum-mit v y j, Logan. Lieutenant Russell Ii ilaughan, who broke the world's rec-ord for speed In an airplane and also won the Tulitzer cup by Ms feat, pass-ed through Ogden on his way to the coast He telephoned to his mother Mrs. Tcter W. Maughan, that he was in excellent health after his per for. mances in the east Provo. A Loveless,' Provo building inspector, reports that more than 100 homes hove been built in Provo sinqa January l,of this year, with a total valuation exceeding $.10,000. Mr. Loveless says that moot of the hornet are of the modern bungalow type, with nu avct nge valuation of more than $3-00- 0 each. . Salt Lake City .Miss Ella Conover, formerly night superintendent of nur ses at one of the local hospitals, and a graduate of several courses In pub-lic health nursing nnd allied work, ha been appointed field nurse for the child hygiene bureau of the Utah state board of hrtil'V Osden. The Utah-Idah- o Central Rn!lr"ad company has started action before the public utilities commission of Utah for a refund from the Utah Power nd Light company 0f $24,143.. DC, claimed as overpayment in power bills, between October 22, 1920, and May 12 1922, Salt Lake Cdty. Letters are being Issued by Lleutennnt Colonel W. O. Williams, adjutant general of Utah, to the commanding officer of each nnlt of the national gunrd of Utah, calling attention to the opportunity for guardsmen to compete for appoint-ment to the Unltod States Military ocademy at West Point Salt Lake CltyTThe chamber of commerce nnd Commercial clnb drive for $50,000 with which to advertise Salt Lnke City was a success. The (immint was over subscribed during the week. Og1en. The oil service station at, the Junction of the Riverdale road nnd Washington, wa robbed by three masked and armed men of $20.30, Mmb. After lengthy arguments presented by the attorneys for both skies In the case of Charles Kelley, treasurer of Grand county against the Moyh State bank, which Institution , failed on Junuury 8. 1921. Judge Ml-wort- h Woolley of the district court de-cided in favor of the defunct bank and the defendants. Price. A legal battle wnged In the district court here in behalf of and ugainst a motion for a change of venue for Pete Kukls and fourteen other de-fendants charged with the killing of Deputy A. P. Webb at tunnel No. 2 In Spring Canyon on July 14, when strikers attacked the train which was emerging from the tunnel. Webb waa ;iring tho engine, Ogden. The fourth annual Ogdem livestock show, which will be held la Ogden next January 2, 8, 4, 5 ami 6, will have about twice as many exhlb. Itors as in the past ! Logan. More than a thousand head of cuttle have been driven down Lo-gan canyon off the Cacia forest ra-aer-where they have iHfcn ruiiKei! this season end all of the animals were in excellent condition, Indicat-ing that the range there is In good shape. Reaver. A hnlf-acr- e crop of fine celery has been raised by W. B. Smith on his farm in the west fields. A quantity of the celery was last week on sale at tho local markets and a number of bunches were distributed to the citizens in order to encourage the raising of this valuuhle product. , Salt Lufce City. Correspondent) courses of t!:e University of Utah ex-tension division are now ready to be offered to students. Courses may be cxpe.tcl to complete them within one year. Full Infnrnation of the conrset la available ut tue extension division office Logan. At a lim-itlm- : of the city, nnd county coiiimiaslnncra, forestry service officials representatives of the Chamber of Commerce and Fish and Game Club it was decided to es-tablish a park on the tract of InnJ near tho state fluh hatchery in Logaa canyon. Snntiquln. The city council has de-cided that Santaquln is in need of a new city hall and a now Jail. Ths I ground has Kea purchased and bids Wars been asked far vtrnctunta. |