OCR Text |
Show First Gass Job Printing At living prices. Let us asve your next order for anything you want print ed. Rich County News printing is synonymous with art- - and efficiency. I 1 . i Are Yra a Subscriber? If not please fcmembcf your subscription will help makC' this paper strong a thing necessary lor an unsurpassed news service BEACHES EVERY NOOK AND COBNEB OF BICH COUNTY TWENTY-FOURT- r YEAR. - H MM FAVORS EXPANDED NUMBER 47. UTAH NEWS REVIEW WILL BE Plans are being considered .for tlie erection of a uew union depot at Og- FOBCEDTO HELD AS SAFEGUARD 1IAVY RANDOLPH, RICH COUNTY UTAH, SATURDAY, APRIL 30, 1921. den. The contract has been let for the Carnegie library, at American 10,000 MICHIGAN CONGRESSMAN SAYS WHEN WE ARE PREPARED WE CAN ADVOCATE DISARMAMENT. ALLIED POWERS DETERMINED TO FORCE FULFILLMENT OF TERMS OF PACT. GERMAN LEADERS ASSERT NEW REPARATIONS PROPOSALS CAN NOT BE IGNORED. Ohioan Also Declares for an Adequate ' Navy and Urges That There Be the Nucleus for a Large Army for the United States. Premiers Declare Intention of Standing Firmly by the Decisions of the Agreement Arrived " at in Paris. Text Accepted by German Clbinet and Cabled to United States. Teutons Believe That Entente Cannot Afford to Ignore Proposals. Disarmament discusWashington. sion sidetracked consideration of the naval appropriation ibill in the house on Monday, when Representative Kelley, Republican, Michigan, brought forward the committee proposals to provide $396,000,000 for the navy's next fiscal year, of Which $90,000,000 .would be used toward completion of the 1916 building program. , The expansion program, Mr. Kelley asserted, would help to lift the load now on the shoulders of the world for armament construction and maintenance. When these ships we' are building haye been completed, lie said, the United States will equal. in sea power any nation in the world, and will be in a .position to offer proportionate reduction in armament. Theodore Burton, Republican, Ohio, former senator, supported the committee spokesman in his declarations for an adequate navy and also urged that there be the nucleus of a large army for the United States. He declared, 'however, that the time has come for an international conference for the sake of stopping this maddening competition for the construction of armadas. This view was indorsed by Representatives Byrnes, Democrat, South Carolina, who, turning to taxation features involved in military programs, said congress this year would appropriate five and a half billion, or $50 a head for each citizen of the United States. Representative .W. Bourke Ooekran, Democrat, New York, Introduced a resolution to authorize the president, in view of dreadful economic conditions which can be remedied only by ' immediate and active employment of all human hands and capital in productive industry, to offer on behalf of the United States to disarm, and in case of refusal to meet great military forces established anywhere resolutely by creation of greater forces on land and sea. The attitude jf the British government, as disclosed during the conversations of Premiers Briand and Lloyd George here- on April 23, is to stand firmly by the decisions of the agreement arrived at n Paris in January and require Germany to fulfill them. Failure by Germany to do so must compel the allies to apply further pressure, the precise nature of which will be the subject of examination. The two premiers were understood to be in agreement as to the general plan to be followed, hut it was said they wished to have a complete mutual understanding of what was to be done early in May, if in the interval the German government does not submit acceptable proposals. A fresh German proposal is expected to be submitted to the allies immediately, but even its serious discussion would seem to be conditioned upon satisfactory guarantees of exclusion. It appears .that the present German government is in a weak position. French authorities are understood to raise the question whether under-- , takings entered upon by the present German cabinet would be likely to be carried out by one subsequently established. The French military position is clearly defined, but that government earnestly Tdeslres the nominaKpartici-patio- n of Great Britain and Belgium. s Berlin. Tlie German on reparations were presented to Ellis Loring Dressel, the American commissioner, Sunday evening, April 24, and were immediately transmitted to the United States. The governments failure to deliver the note to tlie American mission Saturday nipht, according to the promise of Foreign Minister Simons to the reiclistag, caused numerous rumors which represented the cabinet as being all but disrupted by dissension over the proposal. The protracted deliberations, it was said, were due to conflicting opinions on the phraseology of the note. The cabinet is said to be united regarding the fundamental principles underlying Germany's nCw offer and also assumes complete responsibility for the note, as it does for the step which led to Germanys appeal to President Harding. Reiclistag leaders were so Informed Sunday evening. Tlie German People's party leader stated that the new reparations proposals Germany is making are such that the entente cannot afford to ignore them ; that Germany, in view of the offer of the United States, is to make a reparations offer such as will spare President Harding any embarrassment and not make Germany appear ridiculous in her present action. This party leader declared that France would have tlie least of reasons to reject the new proposals, which he hinted as having been de-s- i coihPfo- -' grfTdto represent mise by Germany. The new German proposals were said by the German Peoples party leader to represent a liberal compromise between the demands of the entente made in Paris and Germanys offer at London. He said they would name guarantees covering economic obligations to be assumed by Germany in connection with her present proposal. says The German a dispatch to the Central News from Berlin, are very long. ;Tlie first part is in the nature of a protest, but in finality they are appreciably nearer a fuller realization of the allies standpoint. The German cabinet unanimously accepted them. It is understood that in the event of tlie occupation of the Ruhr region of Germany, says a Reuter dispatch from Hythe, that no British, troops will be employed, but there will be some cavalry and tanks to show the solidarity of the allies. . Lympne, England. - AUNT EM" WELLS OF INSANE ' Viviani Praises Legion. New York. Rene Viviani, special French envoy, who now is en route home, in a .wireless message of congratulations to the American Legion, its national commander, Colonel W. F. Galbraith, Jr.,' and General Pershing, made public Sunday, invited the Legion men to visit France and declared he never would forget the "courageous soldiers of America. Knox Revives Peace Resolution. States 'Washington. The United will be at peace with Germany finally and officially early next month, unless the administration intervenes to slow up the progress of the Knox resolution in congress. Senator Knox has revised the resolution to conform to minor objections raised against it at a meeting of the foreign relations FATHER Shoots Two Boys and Buries Them committee. Side by Side. San Francisco. John Cornyn, recently released from a state hospital, appeared at the police station Monday with his clothing covered with blood and said he had killed his two hoys, Arthur, aged 7, and Andrew, aged 8, in the hills twelve miles from here. For several hours he maintained lie could not remember .what he had done with the bodies, but later he led a party of officers to the spot where they Were buried. They begged for their lives, he told a priest at the Jail. But they looked so pretty that I had to shoot them. I shot Andrew first. Arthur started to cry. He did not know what to do. I shot him then and placed ' their bodies side by side. j U. S. Course Approved. of the Washington. Approval course of the American government with respect to the reparations conis believed to have been indicated by the allied diplomats here before the dispatch of Secretary Hughes reply to the Berlin appeal that President Harding act as mediator and fix the sum Germany must troversy pay. W. ASHBY JUMP AGAINST ' The Berlin governments appeal for to avert the conn templated coercive measures of the French and British was delivered to American Commissioner Dresel and immediately transmitted to Washington, where it arrived early Thursday afternoon. Secretary of State Hughes took the German note to the White House about 3 p. m. and discussed the question of a reply with the president. It did not take them long to decide that the United States could not accept the position of umpire between a nation with which it was associated in the war. Secretary Hughes returned to tlie state department and dispatched the reply to the Berlin government through the American commission. The action of the president and the secretary of state conforms to the lines laid down in the previous Hughes note to Germany. In that communication Mr. Htighes said that the' United States stands with the allies In holding Germany responsible for the war and bound to pay reparation to the s full extent ability, fairly and justly determined. He expressed the hope of a renewal of the negotiations. American-mediatio- of-it- Long Journey With Dead Man. An eleyen-dajourney by canoe, toboggan and dog teamthrough the wilds of northern Ontario to bring back to civilization the body of Ward E. Brown, an American gold prospector, ended April 2, when-T- . Barker, Wards com- Iort Arthur, Ont. y ' subjected in religious perescution were seeking their native land and refuge here solely to avoid such hardships. The second would admit children of American citizens tinder 18 years of age, independent of the percentage of limitation, and the third would give preference to tlie families and relatives of American citizens and former service men honorably discharged from tlie army or navy regardless of whether they had been naturalized, in determining the question of admissibility under the restricted total. The principal fight was over an amendment offered by Representative Sabath, Illinois, ranking Democrat ou the immigration committee, to open tlie gates to political refugees. This was lost after a long debate, which was closed by Representative Mondell, Republican leader, who said that under it, even the former German emperor could come here. Robbers Do Thorough Job. Three masked Lawrence, Kans. men held up Arthur Marks, a jeweler, in liis garage here Saturday night, took a diamond valued at $2000 from him, and then forced him to go to his home, where they held up his wife and mother and obtained jewels totaling $3000 in value. F. WALLENBERG reached Many Hospital Beds Are Available. Chicago. There are 4013 hospitals with 311,159 beds in the United States, tlie council on medical education and hospitals of the American Medical association reported Thursday. It is es- timated an average of 30,624 beds are occupied each day. Jump has been appointed private secretary to Secretary of Ag- He comes from riculture Wallace. Baltimore and entered the department 14 years ago as a messenger. W. Ashby i o ' fe! Attempt to Burn Home of Lord Bishop Dublin. An attempt was made Wednesday night to burn the residence of the Most Rev. M. Fogarty, lord bishop of Killaloe, Ennis. The front of the house- was well ablaze when the fire was discovered and extinguished. BLUE LAWS Woman Politician Indorses Movement to Bring Back Beer and Wine. New York. What promised to be the mildest of manifestations in favor of personal liberty was galvanized into life here Monday night by Elizabeth Marluiry. famous woman politician and author, and ended in uproarious indorsement of a movement to organize an American peoples league to heat tin? blue laws and bring buckjjeer and wine. The male element. - was in charge when the speaking began, after a banquet at the Commodore, at which numerous notables were gathered to pro test against the Lords day alliance, the Reform bureau and the campaign of the W. C. T. U. " President Harding on Washington.' After rejecting an Washington. April 21 declined to accede to the re- amendment seeking to ' admit to the quest of the German government to United States foreign political refuact as mediator with the allies on the gee, tlie house on April 22 passed the question of reparations and to fix the immigration restriction bill substantialamount the German people are to pa. ly the same as it went through last At the same time the president, :ip session, only to be given a pocket veto. replying to the German appeal, ex- Tlie bill now goes to the senate, where pressed conditionally the willingness Republican leaders said it would be panion 'and brother-in-law- , '' this place. ' ' . CAMPAIGN Expresses Willingness to Bring New Opponent's Make Vain Effort to Alter Measure. European Immigrants to Proposals to Attention of the Allies in a Manner Acceptable' Be Limited to 10 Per Cent of to Them. Aliens Now Resident. Anglo-Japanes- Friend of Founder of L. D. S. Church Passes to Reward. Salt Lake City. Mrs. Emmeline Blanche Woodward Wells, 93 years of age, known as Aunt Em, personal friend of Joseph Smith, founder of the Mormon church; teacher, journalist, suffrage worker and a pioneer 'woman, died April 25, at the home of her daughter. Mrs. Wells lived at the Hotel Utah for many years. She had been a resident of Utah since 1848. She was born February 29, 1828. Mrs. Wells was probably the most widely known and best loved woman of the intermountain section. CRIME RESTRICTIVE MEASURE GOES TO THE SENATE, WHERE EARLY' ACTION IS EXPECTED. fo-ja- DEAD IS PROMPT RESPONSE GIVEN PLfA FOR ACTION TO FORESTALL v ALLIES DEMAND. War With U. S. Unthinkable. Melbourne. For Australia ever to of the American government i-jy.itjiout' delay. take part in a struggle with the Unit- as an intermediary between Germany passed - The jfneasu'ffe'lsrdesigffeiiTo v'be operaed States was something unthinkable and the allies in hrtnging'about a re- tive for fourteen months and would and outslde the bounds of possibility, sumption of negotiations for a limit the entry of aliens to 3 per cent declared William M. Hughesi premier of the ..reparation terras. of the number of nationals of any counof the commonwealth, in concluding If the German government, the pres- try in the United States at the time the debate in the house of representaident said, would formulate new pro' of tlie 1910 census. tives on Saturday on the coming im- posals constituting a proper basis Three amendments were adopted by he would consider the house. One would permit admisperial conference at which Premier for discussion, Hughes Is to represent Australia. The bringing the matter to the attention sion in excess of the 3 per cent limit e subject of the treaty of the allies in a manner acceptable of ail aliens clearly proving they had was prominent In the discussion. to them. been to -- -- counter-proposal- I Physician Acquitted. Idaho Falls, Idaho. Dr. J. R. Shupe, on trial for murder in connection with the death., of Mrs. Florence Naif, was F. Wallenberg is the newly appointacquitted by a Jury In the district ed Swedish minister to the United court on Thursday. States. ark. During tlie past week eight people In Utah, were bitten by rabid dogs, it has been reported. Bids have been asked for the erecaddition to tlie tion of. a school building at Corinue. Mrs. Charles Ryliurg, 70 years of age, was run down by an auto truck two-roo- at Murray and fatally injured. It is announced that the Rio Grande railroad will start immediate construction of a line through Saiina can yon. Mapleton is considering culling an election for tlie issuance ef $25,000 bonds for tlie construction of a town waterworks system. Falling a distance of 35 feet from an electric light pole, James D. an electrician of Salt Lake, was fatally injured. A new high school building Is to be erected at Pleasant Grove, contractors having been advised that they may now submit bids. Memorial day will be observed In Logan in a very impressive manner, according to the plan of Logan post No. 7 of tlie American Legion. The board of supervisors of the drainage district cen template a project for tlie drainage of about 12,000 acres of alkali lands In and j around Corinne. . Uintah county and the Indian department at Fort Duchesne propose !o construct a bridge over Duchesne liver, six miles south of Fort Duchesne, at a cost of $5000. An audit of income tax returns filed for 1918 and 1919, completed at Washington only recently, has revealed hundreds of delinquents in the Salt Lake district, it has been announced. By more than two to one the of Ogden voted In favo of the second bond Issue within less than month by passing affirmatively on tSe 'prOposed $150,000' issue' for 'school Ken-nell- y, -- Co-rin- ne purposes. ' Tlie Green River Power company has applied to tlie federal power commission for permits to build four water power projects on Green river, contemplating a development of nearly 1,000.000 horsepower. Tlie Delta schools, which were scheduled to close down on account of shortage of funds, may continue for another month, as a number of the teachers have proposed teaching out the regular term free of charge. By a' decision of the public utilities commission of Utah, the Denver & Rio Grande is permitted to take one train each way daily off its service to Similar permission was alBingham. lowed the Bingham & Garfield some time ago. Closes S. Gudnnmdson, of the West TIntic Cooperative Agricultural society, the organization which has gained considerable notoriety through their alleged practice of the doctrine of was declared sane wife sacrifice, by a commission at Nephi. Has Story of Buried Treasure. The fourth annual conference of Billings, Mont. Arrested here on a state directors, state supervisors and in agriculture, trades larceny warrant issued In Missouri teacher-trainer- s and industries, and home economics more than five years ago, M. F. Anderson told Chief of Police Talgo he of the federal board for vocational edarucation for the Pacific coast region was the victim of a frame-u- p ranged by a partner who desired to was held in Salt Lake, April 21, 22 get him out of the way so he could not and 23. share a buried treasure amounting to Tlie Utah County Banking associa$83,000, which was hidden near the tion was formed at Provo, when Wyoming-Montan- a boundary forty hankers from all parts of Utah counyears ago by a hand of stage rob- ty assembled at the Provo Commercial club and elected T. N. Taylor of bers. Provo president, and R. E. Allen of Provo secretary and treasurer of tlie Attacks Japans Military Policy. association. Tokio. The movement among business men' in southern Japan for armawere products ment curtailment, the strength of served exclusively at a dinner given which is understood to have created by the women of the Presbyterian perturbation in army and naval cir- church. The ladies serving the dinner cles, Is also finding vigorous expres- wore costumes represting the Ogdeu sion in Tokio through the leadership of products. The menu was supplied by Rihei Hyuga, managing director of the Industrial and manufacturing the Oriental Sugar Manufacturing companies of the city. company, a man of progressive and The coroners jury has decided that liberal ideas. Oscar J. Hemenway, aged 19,. of Salt Lake, who was found dead In his auRelief in Near East Reviewed. tomobile near the mouth of Ogden Accounting for the dis- canyon, at Ogden, with a bullet hole Washington. bursement of $13,129,117 in 1920 and a in his head, met death by his own total of $60,000,000 to date, Including hand. It was at first thought that flour, clothing and medical supplies, he had been murdrfed. the annual report of the Near East ReJohn and Josephine Scardino were lief, Incorporated by congress August found not guilty of the murder of Mike 6, 1919, was filed with congress April n Termain by the jury at Ogden. 23, by Charles V. Vickrey, general secwas shot at the Scardino home in Ogden, February 20, 1920. Jennie retary of the relief organization. Scardino, 16 years of age, daughter of Columbus Raiders on Trial. John and Josephine Scardino, adIteming, N. M. Tlie death penalty mitted she killed Termain in self dewill be asked for tlie sixteen alleged fense. Villista raiders whose, trial opened in For three days last week about 250 tlie district court here Monday mornmen of American Fork were kept busy ing on charges of murder growing out in widening and deepening the-- city of tlie raid of March 9, 1916, oil the reek and. placing trees and brush and border town of Columbus, N. M., by a iher blockades necessary to. hold back detachment of Francisco Villas rebei he spring water which, from all s, troops. will be very heavy this year. -- counter-proposal- Made-in-Ogde- n Tor-mai- lndi-ation- |