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Show 'I ft 1 Are Too a First Gass Job Prating At living prices- - Let us hare your next order for anything you want print ed. Rich County News printing is synonymous with art and efficiency. - r ' " V k ' - SubriJn If not please remember will your subscription help make this paper strong a thing necessary for an unsurpassed news service. BEACHES EVERT HOOK AHD JO0BNEB OF RICH COUNTY Vt BT TWENTY-SIXT- H "I NUMBER 30 RANDOLPH RICH COUNTY, UTAH, SATURDAY, JUNE 9, 1923 YEAR On the Concrete News Notes:: From All Part of UTAH TO BE ENFORCED ' TREASURY DEPARTMENT TO AP-- TWIN FALL8 WOMAN 8UCCUMB3 PLY COURT DECI8ION TO TO ELLECTS OF BICHLORALL VESSEL3 IDE OF MERCURY CITY EDITOR OF EL PASO TIMES ? BRINGS ACTION FOR DAMAGES 8teamsrs Driven Within Limit To Be Required to Put Up Bond; Dlplomate to'' Be Allowed Quota Article Declaring Newspaper Wat Placed in Jail for Driving Car While Intoxicated, Cited Dead Girl Provo. Chief of Police Wren Wilkins is In receipt of a telegram from the officers at Los Angeles asking him to keep a lookout for Ted Spencer 35, who is wanted there on a charge Man of murder. Had Cauaed Arreat of 8uapect In - 1922 On Statutory Murder Charge Application to the Washington. of the supreme courts decision barring all beverage liquors from territorial waters of the United States Is provided in regulations Issued by the treasury to take effect after 12 :01 a. m., June 10. Specifically the regulations as published Monday apply the three-mil- e deadline to liquor carried for beverage use on any United States or foreign vessel as sea stores. It was by finding some means of exemption for liqnor so carried that treasury officials had hoped at first to avoid conflict with foreign laws. Besides the exemption granted liquor for medicinal and sacramental purposes, the only exceptions in the wall thrown up against liquor transportation within the three mile limit are the nsual immunity accorded diplomats and the privileges allowed foreign vessels of war. Also vessels forced by distress into an American harbor and able to show that the necessity of refuge was grave will, if they have liquor aboard, be permitted to give bond for faithful observance of the dry law. Twin Falls, Ida. Poison ihurder mystery which bids fair to rival the celebrated Southard case culminated here when Mrs. Cecil Hurst Black-buwife of Melvin Blackburn of Filer, died at the Twin Falls general hospital Thursday morning, as a result of taking a dose of sixty-tw- o grains of bichloride of mercury three weeks ago. The medichine waa received through the malls. Her huBband, from whom she was separated, admits that he sent her medicine through the mails, but says that it was only calomel. He has been in Jail ever since the poisoning was reported to the officers, charged with contributing to an abortion. He denied persistently since his arrest that he had any criminal intent in sending the medicine; denies that he sent poison and declines to disclose the person from whom he received the alleged calomel. Early in the fall of 1922, Blackburn was arrested on complaint of Cecil Hurst the victim of the poisoning. Shortly afterwards, Blackburn married the girl and the charge wa stricken from the court docket, though the case has never been forChinese Bandits Join- - Troops mally dismissed. After living with his wife a short time; It Is said that Peking. Enrollment of the Shantung bandits into the national army they separated and have not lived It is reis proceeding at Tsaochwang, accord- together regularly since. a ing to id vices recelvedat the Ameri- ported that Blackburn has made can legation Monday. 'But those of number of statements relative to his calo-snetiie bandits who do not desire to be- reason for sending his wife the come avray, soldiers, are , WefUberB- - of ' the legation feel that it will be only Immigrant Border Runners Caught Forty-tw- o a matter of days until the eight forHarpon Springs, Fla. eigners still held on Patozuku moun- Spanish and Italian immigrants attain are released. Barring unfore- tempting to smuggle their way into seen complications, the negotiations the United States were captured are expected to result successfully Thursday. They said they had paid $140 each for passage and guaranteed within a short time. entry to this country. They were Officers Bullet Kills Boy; Giving Aid taken to Tampa to jail. Kansas City, Mo. William Sheeran, Ruined by Quake In Persia 14, was killed here by an officer who Villages g Allahabad, Persia. Advices to the was attempting to save him from robbed by two negroes. Sheeran newspaper Pioneer from Tehran, was being by the state that 1,000 persons have been strongarmed i. ' negros when Bert Haycock, patrol- killed by an earthquake at a earthshocks covered The man, passed. Haycotk fired once and then gave chase to the negroes. When period of several hours. Many villlie returned Sheeran was unconscious ages are said to have been devastated. from a bullet wound in the body and died shortly afterward in a hospital. 8heriff Returns With Clara Phillips New Orleans, La. Clara Phillips, '800,000 ShrlnerS to Visit Washington who escaped from jail in Los Angeles last December after her conviction of Washington. Railroads and motor Mrs. Alberta Meadows, caravans poured Shriners into the the murder of to this returned country Tuesday thousthe national capital Monday by ands. Fifty thousand of the visitors from Honduras in the custody of was placed in Teached Washington in time to spend California officers and of detenhouse the Orleans parish week-ensaw the but Monday the to starting on her great movement into the capital, the tion, preparatory coast climax of which was reached early long journey to the Pacific Tuesday when it was estimated that Claude Kitchin Succumbs to Illness friends 300,000 Shriners and their N. C. Wilson, Representative will fill the city. Claude Kitchin formerly minority leader in the lower house, died ThursWhipping Boss on Trial day morning. Physicians said Mr. Lake City, Fla. Thomas Walter Kitchins death was the culmination Higginbotham, convict whipping boss, of complication which developed afwent on trial Monday on a charge ter he suffered a stroke of paralysis of first degree murder in connection in 1920. He had never been in good Tabert Martin of of death with the health since. North Dakota, who died, the state charges as a result of a flogging adCornice hnjures Pedestrian ministered by Higginbotham at the Falling Six persons were in lurSt. Louis. Putnam Lumber company camp at believed several ed, seriously when Tabert contends Clara. The defense lightning struck the cornice on a died of natural causes. downtown business building late SatThe heavy cornice fell to urday. Crlqul Wins From Kilbslno the street, pulling part of the fire New York. Eugene Criqui of escape with it and smashing several Prance, hero of Verdun, won the automobiles parked in the business 'featherweight championship of the district. world Saturday knocking out Johnny Kilbane of Cleveland in the sixth Grade Crossing Accident Fatal round of a fifteen round match. Buffalo, N. Y. Four persons were killed and one was slightly hurt SatNeat Prostration Reported In Brooklyn urday when an Erie train hit an autoNew York. The first heat prostramobile at the Erie railroad grade tion of the summer was reported crossing near Gowanda. The victims here Saturday. Mrs. Anna Byers. 55, are all of the family of John Smith, collapsed on the street in Brooklyn ensineer at the plant of the Eastern Her condition is not serious. Tanners Glue company. El Paso, Tex. The Ku Klux Klan letter is named in a suit for $50,000 damages filed In state court here Tuesday by Hal F. Kelley, city editor of the El -- L t j , P ' . be--in- Turbat-I-Haidar- CUTOUT THE NUISANCE- - OVER RELIGION SEVENTEEN MOB WOUNDED WHEN PROVINSTORMS CIAL PALACE EIGHT HUNDRED OF FOLLOWERS SURRENDER AFTER BATTLE, WITH CONSTABULARY 4 Committee of Catholics Marches Governors Office; The Assemblage Starts Hurling Stones to Erophet 1 f Proclaimed Hlmsslf Bullet r00' Stirred Natives I Unto Attempt to Drive Out Americans Mexico Qlty. Newspaper dispatches Manila. Fifty-thre- e fanatical Mor from Durango City report that ten os, Including Akbara, the were killed and seventeen persons bullet-proprophet, have been killed wounded, eighth seriously, when a mob Thursday stormed the provincial in & fight with the constabulary on island of Fata, near Jolo (Sulu). palace in protest' against the law tit? A e total of 606 Moros surrendered to the number of limiting to twenty-fivallowed each religious clergymen consthbulajy ..after the battle. It self-style- d denomination. - , ., , r,f throughout the state capitol during the night. The trouble grew out of what was intended to be a demonstration and protests against the law. A committee of prominent Catholics, accompanied by a crowd of 3,000 persons, marched to the palace to ask the got ernor and legislature to rescind the measure. While its spokesmen were awaiting admittance to the building the assemblage listened to several fiery speeches and finally began to bombard the palace with stones. The guard of mounted police discharged their rifles over the head of the crowd, whereupon the demonstrators rushed the guards and disarmed them. In the promiscuous shooting that followed three policemen and seven civilians were killed. Promulgation of the law about ten days ago caused great excitement throughout the state, In which there are normally about 250 Catholic Church officials have clergymen. be served notice that services will suspended and the measure removed. Royalist Plot Discovered In Parip Paris. A royalist plot directed against the republic has spread throughout France, Maurice Manoury, minister of the interior, announced in the chamber of deputies late Friday. The government has discovered proofs that the royalists of all France bound themselves together in a conspiracy directed at the government, he said. declared the police had Manoury seized documents showing plans and the list of members. The investigation is continuing. The revelation concerning the plot came as the result of pressure brought by the left wing of the chamber against the government, following attack upon three socialist leaders Thursday night, in which they were roughly handled. It was charged this attack was designed by the royalists. t Try S. F. to N. Y. Flight Washington. Clare K. Vance, Ind., an air mail pilot, will transattempt a twenty hour non-sto- p continental flight from San Francisco to New York within the next ten days, Air Pilot the National Aeronautical association announced here Friday. Vance will fly in an airplane he built himself. Wage Increase Granted Expressmen Chicago. In a decision made pubGteamers Collide off Michigan Shore Carnarvons Widow Gives Collection lic Tuesday the United States RailThe Sault Ste. Marie, , Mich. The Earl.of Carnarvons private col- road Labor board increased the hoursteamers Schiller and Wilkinson were lection of antiquities will be presented wage of approximately 1,850 memin collision off Point Iroquois Sunday by his widow to the nation for the ly of the Chicago local of the Railbers night the former being beached to British museum. The prospective way Express Drivers, Chauffeurs word received here. The Wilkinson gifts will include whatever part of Conductors and Helpers Union 4 is believed to be slightly damaged. the treasure found in Tutankhamens cents. The increase is estimated to Heavy fog and smoke due to forest tomb is allotted to Carnarvons estate involve an additional annual expendifires was responsible for the cdllison. by the Egyptian authorities. ture of about $200,000. ' te I mated ttitt, fanfetie S. J. Issacks, Charles DeGroff, J. A. Borders, J. M. Crawford anil W. J. Moran, named in the I0T ' sV-nI- ng, Paso Times. C L. Sirmans, - Brigham City. After he had been thrown into the air by one automobile, Leslie Rock, of Willard, fell on the hood of another machine and was seriousl injured. Kaysville Walter Steed and Verde Cook, both of Clearfield were injured near Layton when a car driven by Eugene Sandall of Layton crashed into the car driven by Steed. Proov. Charles H. Ward, former county commissioner, suffered a fractured thigh and was badly bruised when he was struck by an automobile driven by James Crook of Eureka. Ogden. Eradication of weeds and other crop pests is urged by T. H. Morrell, district Inspector of agriculture. He has advised farmers to cut all weeds before they go to seed. Provo. A fruit basket factory capable of turning out 400 dozen peach and apple baskets a day is to be started in operation In Provo this season through the organization of a cooperative company of farmers. Ogden. When his automobile overturned on the dugway in Ogden canyon, John W. Sullhan was injured. The two persons riding in the back seat of the car were uninjured. Pleasant Grove. tStrawberries are to be sent to all corners of the United States on June 20, to advertise one of Utahs most luscious fruits and tell the world It is strawberry day at petition as defendants, with many others whose names are unknown to the plaintiff, are alleged to be publishers of a weekly sheet known as the Frontier Klansman. It is alleged that Sirmans, who purports to be the owner and editor of the Frontier Klansman, Is hired by the defendants, and the defendants are responsible for the acts complained about. W. J Moran is alleged in the petition to be the owner of the printing is establishment where the sheet published. It is further alleged that the organization meets in the dark and secret and refuses to disclose the names of its members, while at the same time it makes claim that its members are all 100 per cent Americans; that It poses as a power for good and that eye; that init claims an stead of being a power for good in the community, it has had the opposite effect in this community, and , that where before there existed a Pleasant Grove. spirit of harmony and cooperation , Ogden. An unusual dam made by an automobile which plunged Into there is now suspicion and distrust. C.'L. Sirmans is named as one of the North Ogden canal caused the ditch ta erllo w.with aerlousfdnwage to adjolnfngTarmS; ' such has charge of the roster of memSalt Lake City. Nick Masaya was bership. fined $50 by City Judge Pratt, for passing a standing street car with Turks Agree to Advisors an automobile. conLausanne The long standing Richfield. Grace Bernstein age 6, troversy over Judicial guarantees for of Circleville had her forearm fracadhas been foreigners in Turkey tured and her hand badly torn when East Near conference, the by justed thus removing one of the stumbling she caught the member In the gearblocks in the path leading to the ing of a cream separator. The Turks agree to Salt Lake peace treaty. City. Sam Hayden, the appointment of four foreign ad- bankrupt merchant, convicted on two visors who will be authorized to fol- counts of misuse of the mails in a low the proceedings in all cases and scheme to defraud was sentenced to make recommendations to the Turkish serve four years in the federal prison. The advisors ministry of justice. Ogden. S. S. Smith of this city must be informed of all arrests and was notified of his election as director searches. domiciliary of the federal land bank at Berkeley, g at- large, including three petty chieftains. The authorities belive the fight has broken the back of the fanatics movement, but further constabulary detachments are being sent to the district to gather in all the adherents of the Prophet Akbara. Akbara, the Moro fanatic leader, who fell in the Pata battle, was regarded as a man of more than ordinary intelligence. He formerly had been a trader in Sulu and Visayan. When business slumped he returned to his native island of Pata. Recently he foisted himself on the people of the district, who are principally Mohammedians, as a prophet with divine instructions to drive the Americans end other Christians into Knights Templar Special Wrecked the sea and establish in Sulu a governMich. Six persons were Lansing, ment that would be responsible only and 55 injured Tueskilled reported to heaven." day in the wreck of a special train on the Grand Trunk railroad, which Four Captives Set Free went into the ditch when it struck Tientsin. Four more of the foreign a broken rail near Durand, Mich. The captives held by the Suchow train train bore commanderies of Knights bandits, one American, two British Templar from Muskegon, Grand Rapsubjects and one Mexican, have been ids, St. Johns and Ionia, which were released unconditionally and arrived on theif way to the state convention Saturday At the relief camp at Tsao- at Flint. Two coaches were telechwang, according to a telegram from scoped. Two members of the Ionia there. Those released were Jerome commandery were reported among A. Henley, American, Commodore hothose killed. There were about 300 tel, New York, . employed by the Knights on the train. Fearon Daniel company at Shanghai; Edward Elias and Theodore China Would Buy Planes both British subjects and Manila. An agent of the Pekin brokers pf Shanghai ; Manuel A. government is here negotiating for Verea, manufacturer of Gudalapara, the purchase of five airplanes formerMexico. ly used in the Philippine army service. As there is an embargo on the N. Y. Governor Repeats Law shipment of war materials to China, Albany, N. Y. The Mullane-Gag- e Governor General Wood cabled Washstate prohibition enforcement act is ington for a ruling on the sale of the dead. Governor Smith killed it Satplanes. The Chinese government Is urday with the few strokes of a pen also looking for aviators to take sernecessary, to affix his signature to the vice in the Chinese army. legislatures repeal bill, dropped four weeks ago. In announcing his action, Mob Attacks Motorman of Death Car the governor called for modification of New York. Led by the mother of the Volstead act by congress, which Solomon Elizerburg, who would ' fix the alcoholic content of lust had been killed by a surface car, permissabie beverages at a point' that an angry mob of a thousand persons would make possible the sale of beer Tuesday attacked William Moonev, and light wines in the states that the motorman. He escaped by fleeing want them. to a nearby car barn. The boy, according to witnesses, was killed when Womans Klan Organized he stepped from behind a pile of dirt Washington, The creation of a and stone in front of the car. gigantic womens Ku Klux Klan here Saturday night widened the brench Rum Ruinners and Police Battle between Dr. H. W. Eaans, imperial Washington. Police and prohibition wizard, and Colonel, W. J. Simmons, agents engaged in a running gun who have been at odds fight with alleged bootleggers here emperor, over the Kamelia, a womans klan Friday when a booze car tried to esauxiliary organized by the latter. Klan cape back into Maryland, with its spokesmen declared the new organiza- oarco, which was being brought into tion would start with a membership Washington through the cordon of of 250,000 women thorugh the affilia- dry agents surrounding the capital. tion of five large protestant womens Two men were captured and forty-fivbodies subscribing to the principle of gallons of whisky taken. the klan. Sap-phler- e, e Oal. Delta. Beans and cucumbers in this community were killed by the Other crops were frost of last week. not seriously affected. The beans and cucumbers were quite young and will be replanted. Bingham Caught in a savein as be was working beside a steam shovel in the Utah Copper mine here, Louis Lotsis, 43, was instantly killed. Ogden. An automatic cannon firing 120 rounds of one and pound projectiles a minute and declared by experts to be the greatest rapid fire gun ever invented, is the of John M. latest achievement Browning, world renowned Ogden inventor. one-quart- Ogden. An increase of 5 cents an hour for all class A-- l skilled mechanics employed in the Southern Pacific shops in this city was announced from the office of Superintendent W. L. Hack. Moab. President L. H. Redd of the San Juan stake, pioneer settler of the San Juan country, and former member of the state legislature, died at a hospital here after a brief attack of influenza. Bingham. Hyrum Partridge, 25 years of age, was instantly killed when he was struck by a Bingham & s Garfield ore truck. Delta The estate of Wm. S. was given judgment jointly against Fillmore City and J. A. Kelly In the sum of $5,500 for the death of Mr. Rmington. Cedar City The solid rock abutment work for the $35,000 steel bridge being erected acrqgs Coal creek, north of town, is completed and ready for the laying of the steel. Moab. Oil operators south of the Juan river, residents of that San section, and the state of Arizona are cooperating in constructing a good automobile road to points on the Santa Fe railway Rim-ingto- n |