OCR Text |
Show First CUu Job Printing Are Ton a Subscriber? At tiring prices. Let us hare your next order for If not please remember your subscription will help make this paper strong a thing necessary for an unsurpassed news scrrice. anything you want print cd. Rich County News printing is synonymous with art and efficiency. - BEACHES EVERY NOOK. AKD CORNER OP RICH COUNTY 33 TWENTY-FIFT- RANDOLPH, RICH COUNTY, UTAH. SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 9. 1922. YEAR. H First Ppy School NUMBER 43. LABOR DAY IS Pithy News Notes From All Parts of UTAH PLOT TO DERAIL TRAIN AT GARY, INDIANA, 13 ADMITTED BY MEN NOW ON TRIAL COLUMNS AND Salt Lake. The Utah state board of pardons will hold a meeting Saturday, September 16 at the Utah state prison. AD SUIT 8EEKING TO RESTRAIN MEN ON WALKOUT FROM ROADS FILED BY DAUGHERTY MARCHING Papers Request That 8trikera Be strained From Interfering in Any Way With Operators Of Railroads Speeches of Union Chiefs Generally Stress Purposes of Fighting for Policies; Many Parades Are Held DRESSES FEATURE USUAL ANNUAL CELEBRATION Victor Peterson, a rail striker, was shot and seriously wounded by a strike breaking negro. Salt Lake '8peaker Told Men to Jimmy Track and Make Equipment Appear In Poor Condition. Men Held Former Shop Workers Re- Chicago. The United State governFive men charged with ment Friday was granted a temporary restraining order against the six shop exp-es- s" craft unions, their officials and members from interfering in any way with the operation of the railroads, and 1 were killed. their properties. Five others were held in connecThe order was granted by Federal tion with the wreck investigation and District Judge James H. Wilkerson'on at least two more who are known of United States Attorney application were sought, acording to the police. General Harry M. Daugherty and DisConfessions obtained from some of trict Charles F. Clyne. The the prisoners not only solved the order Attorney will remain in force until Sepwreck of the express, but bared a tember 11, pending hearing on the govplot to send the Twentieth Century ernments application for a permanent train writ of injunction. limited, crack New Into the ditch near Elkhart, Ind., the The underlying principle Involved police said. in this action, Attorney General The five who face murder charges Daugherty said In concluding his plea are: Joseph Papourvitch, Charles for the court order, is the survival Usells, John Petrowski, Albino Alesslo and supremacy of the government of and James Prohetsh. All were said the United States. to be striking shopmen. No union, or combination of unions Uselis, Petrowski and Papourvitch can, under our law, dictate to the were said to have confessed the wreck American union, the statement conplot. The men were employed in tinued. New York Central shops. They When the unions claim the right named Alesslo in their confessions, to dictate to the government and to and he admitted knowledge of the dominate the American people and plot, according to police, but main- deprive the people of the necessities and of lif then the government will detained that Usells, Petrowski Papourvitch were responsible for the stroy the unions for the government wreck. of the United States is supreme and Taken to the scene of the wreck, must endure." Uselis, the police said,. reenacted the Tomoro'w it will be said by some work of the wreckers, in pulling more malicious than truthful that epikes and loosening rails. this proceeding is intended as a death Uselis in his statement declared blow to the unions. In my judgment that at the union meeting on Satur- this movement (the ihjunction) is day, a speaker, whose name he did necessary for the projection and prenot give although the police are said servation pf the unions themselves. ' to ktj,ow itj AiA' not instruct 'him pad 1 So lorig and to the extent tftatT his three companions to' wreck a train, can. speak for the'govet-nmen- t of the . Hesaid the speaker spokeRiB follows: United States, I will use the power of You go out to Gary or somewhere the government within my control in that neighborhood and jimmy the to prev ent the labor unions of the track to cause trouble and make it country from destroying the open appear that equipment is In bum con. shop. dition and that its dangerous for When a man in this country is not train crews to ride trains. permitted to engage in lawful toil, On the day after the wreck, Usewhether he belongs to a union or not, lis aserted, plans were laid for him the death knell to liberty will be and Alesso to go to Elkhart, Ind., sounded and anarchy will supercede some time the next week and seek organized government. , work in the New York Central shops, Already some 5,500 marshals have supposedly as strikebreakers in an at- been so assigned, and in addition spetempt to derail the Twentieth Cen- cial service men of the department tury limited. The arrests, the police have taken up similar work throughdeclared, probably prevented further out the country, the attorney general violence. said. The cost of such special service, he Once Pacifist Now Revolutionist. said, already expended was more than Dublin. Erskine Childers, Britsb $1,000,000 for the eight wreeks duraauthor of the Riddle of the Sands, tion of the strike. In California alone, Mr. Daugherty and former noted pacifist, led Irish rebels in a motor boat attack Tuesday said, more than $75,000,000 worth upon international cables at Valen. of fruit and produce already had been tina. The former pacifist is now with destroyed because of the failure of Eamonn de Valera, directing the in- transportation systems to move the r surgent revolt against the free state. crops. He assisted the Irish during the war In Somerset, Kentucky, he said. against Britlan and then turned 25,000 cars of bituminous coal were against Collins and Griffith following congested in the railroad yards Frithe split in the DaiL day. Vandals had tampered with more than 5,000 cars there, 'he said, and as Copper Mines Resume Nogales, Arlz. After having been a result the nation was faced with sufclosed down for more than a year, the fering for want of coaL Fifty per cent of the engines of the Great Cananea copper mine at Can-aneSonora, Mexico, resumed opera- nations railroads have been rendered tions Saturday afternoon, according to useless by lawless activities since the word reaching here. It resumed, said strike began, he said. The Chicago & Alton railroad has the message, with two furnaces operbeen forced into receivership by the more than an dafter $1,000,000 ating had been expended for improvements drain upon its resources caused by the strike during the shutdown. Chicago. murder Tuesday accused of wrecking on the the million dollar Michigan Central near Gary, Ind, August 20, when two ot the train crew SENATE PASSES THE WORKERS RECEIVE York-Chicag- o - , -- ' ' a, Western Roads To Pick Loads Washington. Railroads west of the Mississippi river were authorized Thursday by the interstate commerce commission to give preference and priority to the movement of foodstuffs, livestock, perishable products and fuel whenever their operating conditions become such as to cause freight congestion or blockade. The order declared an emergency and laid down rules for the conduct of the wetsern lines indentical with those which have been in effect on railroads east of the Mississippi for several weeks. PASSES .NION PACIFIC AND OTHER $4,000,000,000 MEASURE LINES AGREE TO GIVE ,SHOPSENATE AND NOW GOES MEN INCREASEIN WAGES' TO CONFERENCE Salt Lake Conference Covering, Entire Bill Also Provides for Acceptance by Systems Reaches Agreement Veterans of Insurance CertiI Which Will Mean ficates In Lieu ef Better Pay , the Cash Salt Lake. A working agreement nibracing a wage scale ranging from i to 15 cents per hour higher for certain classes- - of shoperaft ' work' and several cents lower per hour .for other classes than the scale recommended by the railway labor board, which precipitated the present nationwide strike of railroad shopmen, was signed Wednesday by thirty general chatinanj of the newly orgaedfeop-JEpU3i- . association; Union PaclfteiSystem, and the four general managers of the various units of the system. We have endeavored to gain recognition of the individuality of the shopman and rats of pay which will correspond, as compared with a dead level rate and lack of recognition of individuality of the employe which existed before, said C. E. Anderson of Le Grande, Ore, system general chairman. The wage scale in the agreement is based indirectly on the scale recommended by the labor board, but provides for rates of pay for full fledged mechanics ranging from 72 cents to 85 cents per hour; for helpers rates ranging from 47 to 68 cents per hour. m answer to an Inquiry if men now on strike could belong to the association and have the privileges it if they desire to become with the system, Mr. Anderson said: Yes if they have not made themselves too obnoxious during the r ike. A man may belong to tne American Federation of Labor and also this organization. The agreement was signed by H. V. Platt, general manager of the Oregon Short Line who has also acted In behalf of W. M. Jeffers lof the Union n Pacific; J. P. OBrien of the and Navigation Railway ompany and W. H. Comstock of the Los Angeles and Salt Lake railroad and added their names to the agreepro-rid- Oregon-Washijigto- ment The signers for the employes included Mr. Anderson, W. J. Taylor, system general vice chairman; R. J. Putnan, system general chairman, J. F. Sellen, general chairman of the Union Pacific, C. H. Gustin, general chairman for the Oregon Short Line, J. N. McCamnnt, general chairman for the Los Angeles & Salt Lake. Bomb Gang Head Arrested. Chicago Micheal Krischumas, 33 believed to be a leader in a ring of Pope Pius to Have Automobile bomb terrorists was captured early Rome. After trying out in the VaFriday after the second bomb ex- tican gardens the automobile presentplosion in a week had occurred at ed to him by the Milan archdiocese, the home of a railroad worker. A Pius has had it duly registered Pope second man was arrested but was reby the Italian authorities. The governleased after being questioned. ment officials were rather embarassed in fulfilling the papal request, as no Premier Poincare Won Over previous pope ever owned a motor Paris. Poincare was won over to car. After a lengthy discussion they the German reparations settlement included the car in the diplomatic Friday only after the definite state-me-n class. The car will be used for the first had been circulated in Allied time in the streets of Rome on Sepcricles that independent action by tember 7 when it will transport the France against Germany at the present new Madonna of Loretto, previously - Fire Takes Sugar Refinery Juncture would be construed in Lon- blessed by the pope, to the Church of refinElm Hall Napoleonville, La. don and Rome as nullification of thcr Santa Maria Maggira. ery, owned by the I. Godchaux Sugar Versailles treaty. to second Baid be the largcompany, Flood Takes Japanese Town est refinery in the state, was destroyKanazawa, Japan. With the excepPassenger Train Wrecked ed by fire of undeteam ined origin Monbe to men who two tion happened of comfestimated by Cape Girardeau. Two persons were day, with the loss on the mountain killed and several Injured Friday gathering firewood pany officials at $2,000,000. when a SL Louis and San Francisco side, the hundred inhabitants of the were railroad passenger train en route from little village of Ushirotani New York Out of School Seats New York. One hundred thousand St. Louis to Memphis, was wrecked drowned when the place was wiped remainNew York children were put on part aear here when a trestle it was cross-In- z out by a flood. Hardly a stick ed of the village. cave way. time because of sealing shortage. X Washington. The four billion dol- lar soldiers bonus bill was passed Thursday by the senate and now goes to conference. two , to twenty-The vote was forty-seve- n with party lines wiped out The roll call follows: For the bonus : 'Republicans. Brand egee, Bursum, Cameron, Cap per. Chit, Cummins, Curtis, Gooding, -- "JJbtfTTWasmftgfdifri La 'Follette, Lenroot, Lodge, McCormick, McCumber, McLean, McNary, Nicholson, Oddie, Rawson, Shortridge, Stanfield, Sutherland, Townsent, Watson of Indiana and Willis 27. The vote for the bonus : Broussard, Democrats Ashurst, Culberson, Fletcher, Gerry, Heflin, Hitchcock, Kendrick, McKellar, Pittman, Pomerene, Ransdell, Reed of Missouri, Robinson, Sheppard, Simmons, Smith, Trammell, Walsh of Massachusetts, and Walsh of Montana. 20. Total 47. Against the bonus : Republicans Ball, Borah, Calder, Dillingham, Edge, France, Freling-huyseKeyes, Nelson, New, Phipps, Reed of Pennsylvania, Smoot, Sterling and Wadsworth 15. Democrats Dial, Class, Myers, Shields, Swanson, Underwood and Williams 7. Total 22. The bill provides for the acceptance of compensation insurof ance certificates in lieu of cash. "This plan proposed by Senator McCumber of North Dakota, chairman of the senate finance committee, differs from the bonus plan carried in the Fordney bill passed by the house and the differences between the two measures will have to be adjusted in conference the bill goes to the White House for President Hardings consideration. The senate added two amendments, which house leaders declare they will not accept. These are the McNary amendment, appropriating $350,000,-00- 0 to enable bonus beneficiaries to settle on reclamation projects in western and southern states and the Simmons amendment, providing that bonus payments shall be met by payments of the interest of the debts of foreign nations to the United States. Board Accepts Belgian Plan Paris. The reparations commission late Thursday unanimously accepted the Belgian compromise on the GerM. man moratorium proposition. Dubois, the French member of the commission voted with his colleagues after a long interview between sesThe sions with Iremier Poincare. commission rejected the motion of Sir John Bradubury of England for a moratorium without further guarantees by a vote of three to two. The first ballot of this motion was a tie, France and Belgium voting against the proposition and England and Italy for it. M. Dubois as president of the commission then cast his second and de- elding vote. To Increase Forces on Rhine Paris American troops in the army of occupation on the Rhine will be increased to 3000, an unconfirmed report received by Le Journal from Mayence pays. The cause Dor the reported increase in the United States forces was not given. way Chicago The nation observed La bor day Monday by a geneal suspension of business throughout the land and with gatherings of union workers in various cities. Fears of untoward demonstrations proved unfounded. The settlement of the hard coal strike hard upon the heels of adjustments in the bituminous fields and the textile industry in New England, together with the continuing dcrease in unemployment in all sections, was hailed by speakers as promising a quick stabilization of the Industrial situation and an early revival of business generally. Recent wage increases announced for the steel industry were also to be regarded as the safe passing by the nation of a critical period of industrial readjustment speakers declared. Secretary of Labor Davis delivered an address at Mooseheart, 111., on the keynote of the necessity of finding some means to settle industrial disputes, without recourse to the futile arbitrament of force Postmaster General Work addressed the United National Association of Post Office Clerks at Buffalo. President Samuel Gompers of the American Federation of Labor and John L. Lewis, president of the United Mine Workers, were scheduled to epeak at a meeting of the Cntral Labor union of Philadelphia. JParades were the principal feature of local programs in many cities. In many eastern communities, however, inclement weather interferred with outdoor, festivities. In, Chicago no ad(6een'mlde for the arrangements customary parade, although meetings were' held by various organizations. SUTHERLAND TO GO ON BENCH Woods Cross. The Woods Cross plant of the Woods Cross Canning company will open for tomato packing for the first time in three years. Murray. James Bodell, 18 years of a resident of Herriman, was drowned at Crystal hot lake, while bathing. age, ; Farmington. At a meeting of the board of education the date of opening the schools of Davis county was fixed at September 18. It is expected that the enrollment will be unusually large, especially In high school. Provo. Utahs crop of onions this year aggregates 100 acres. The estimated yield is placed at 450 bushels cars will be per acre and fifty-tw- o shipped . Last year the shipment was ninety cars. Reports to the bureau of crop statistics show that the condition of sugar beets in Utah i3 highly favorable. Salt Lake. The Utah tax commishas adjourned to meet again in October, at which time further consideration will be given of the work which has been before the commission and the special plans which have been worked out by Professor Bullock, expert from Harvard university. sion Salt Lake. The Horseshoe Pitchers association of Utah will hold a tournament at the coming state fair. The association has sent out a letter to the various counties requesting that some representative of the horseshoe piitchers in the county organize a club with a view of selecting tlio champion' pitcher 5T"TfiS''' 'bounty, to ! enter' the state contest-.,- ,. . Salt Lake. The state road commission lias signed the cooperative agree- ment with Rich county for the grading and gravel surfacing of 7.5 miles of Utah Man to be Given Post in Wash-ingto- gravel surface road from Woodruff to the state line connectby President Harding ing up with the Bear River valley m thru Washington Resignation of Asso- Idaho and the Lincoln highw-aciate Justice John H. Clarke from the Evanston. Wyo. Costs of the project United States supreme court and the are to be met 74 per cent by the fedintention to appoint former Senator eral government and 20 per cent by George H. Sutherland, of Utah, to the county. succeed him, was announced Monday Salt Lake. From the number of liby President Harding. Justice Clarkes . cense plates issued the state is more Sepeffective become will resignation tember 18, when he reaches the age than holding up to the average of an automobile for every ten people in of 65 years. United States and the peak has the and A desire to serve his neighbors not yet been reached. Statistics of some causes in ways which would motor vehicles now show that in the not be possible while he was holding United States there are now nine and public office was given by Justice r million motor vehicles, at, to the a in letter president Clarke almost times the number in twenty his leaving the impelling reason for 1910 and the amount invested is the bench. A retirement from public while there lias been inlife at 65, he added, would conform to vested in road construction during the his philosophy of life. 1 the sum of $2,526,-000,00Senator Sutherland, who has been period The value of a truck average 60 years selected for the vacancy, is is at $1500 and of an automoold. He Was born in Buckingham, bilefigured Utah $750. has over $700,000 in England, in 1862. He served Utah liscense fees on autos this year. in the first state senate, and was a Reeach to state that delegate from Provo. The completion of the publican national convention from county court house will be rushed. 1896 to 1920. Ogden. The Weber gymnasium Chilean Elected League President building will be constructed in a short Geneva. Augustin Edwards of Chile time. was elected president of the third asCedar City. A bridge over Coal sembly of the league of nations, which o was called to order Monday by creek will be constructed at a cost of Da Gama of Brazil, tJhe tem- $40,000. porary chairman. In the voting on the Salt Lake. Utah leads all states in presidency, Senor Edwards received forty-tw- o votes. Dr. Juan Carlos Blan- per acre production of alfalfa seed co, Uruguayan minister to France, one this year. vote, and Dr. Giuseppe Motta, former Salt Lake. A 200 gallon capacity president of Switzerland, one vote. still has been raided and over 1700 tons of mash seized. Greeks Suffer Defeat Adan, Asia Minor. Three Greek r Salt Lake. A plant to manufacture sector army corps in the front have been magnesium chloride from waters ol of the Greco-Turkis-h dispersed and almost annhiliated by Great Salt Lake is being launched. the Turkish nationalists, according to Provo. J. L. Lishonbee, proprietor dispatches received here from Angora, the seat of the Kemalist government of a pool hall, was fined $10 by Judge The Greeks are retreating in disorder Abe W. Turner on a charge of permitand the Turks have advanced In the ting minors to play pool in his piata fsmid sector to within 12 miles of of business. Brusa. Farmington. Davis countys prrauc-tioof onions this year is reported ag Bonus Over Holds Tariff Sway best in quality and the largest pio-- I the Washington. The bonus received duction in the history of the county by another setback in conference Monday. W. T. of Farmington, county Thayne SimSenator of Owing to the absence farm of Davis agent county. mons, North Carolina, chief of the Democratic conferees, the conference Vernal. The f leg of the Green refused to lay aside the tariff tempor- River, Wyo.-Gree- n River, Utah, voy. arily, necessitating a postponment oi age, down the Green river,- - has been the bonus. Chairman McCumber, how- successfully accomplished by a crew ever, announced he plans to rush the of surveyors and boatmen under the bonus to completion, submitting a re-- leadership of K. W. Trimble, topoor to the senate soon" graphic engineer of Washington, D. C. n Utah-Wyomin- g v three-quarte- 1910-192- Dom-inlci- Eski-Sheh- rt |