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Show 4 ; t pnt CUu Job Prating At living prices. Let us J lore your next order for I anything you want print ei Rich County News printing is synonymous with art and efficiency. An Tea a Subscriber? H not please remember your subscription wf3 help make this paper thing necessary strong for an unsurpassed news serrien t BEACHES EYEBT VOOR AJTD CCHJTEB OF BIOH COUNT! TWENTY-FIFT- YEAR. H RANDOLPH, RICH COUNTY, UTAH, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 26. 1921. fTO UTAH NUMBER 21. REVIEW E Contract for the wrecking of th Gardo house, or Amelia palace, Sal' Lake, has been let. On the site a mad era business structure will be erectec for the use of the federal reserve bank BRJAND ASSESTS DISARMED NATION HAS MACHINERY FOR ARMY OF MILLIONS 250,000 German Citizens Are Receiving ' Daily Military Training; Could Raise Army in 4hort Time - of Many Million Men Washington. Germany, while apparently disarmed. Premier Briand told the armament conference ' Monday could with her present machinery raise an army of six million or sev en million . j B men, At least 250,000 Germans were receiving daily military Instruction, he added. , Although a part of Germany evidently wants peace and is ready to get back to peaceful pursuits, the French premier declared another portion, headed by the Lundendorfs and others of the military caste, is continuing to preach the old Prussian doctrines. In a dramatic speech of an hour, the French premier outlined to the conference what is being said at the door of France, which he added, wants " . peace. , , As an example,' M. Briand read several passages from the .memoirs of Ludendorf regarding Germanys for world conquest' Among these citations was Lundendorfs declaration that the Institution of war was a creation of God." Throwing the Lundendorf manuscript dramatically upon the table,. M. Braind declared How can anyone ask France to disarm under such conditions? Reverting to the possibilities that the war parties of the central empires might come back to power, M. Braind recalled there recently was an attempted restoration in Europe which might on fire. setihe "Fortunately for the entente, he added. It was averted." Coming to physical aspects, Premier Briand said it was well understood that some persons took the viewpoint that as Germany was just emerging from the war, she" was In no position to be dangerous. V Our soldiers had a place in the fight. said M. Briand, and they know to what point the German soldier can carry his heroism. Germany still has 7,000,000 men who have made war. You ask Is it possible to mobilize an army there tomorrow? I answer yes. . , -- , . , whole-contine- nt PLOT AGAINST GOVERNOR FOUND Mystery Surrounds Origin of Flames ' Found on Ship New York Searching investigation was begun Monday by federal agents of a mysterious fire discovered In the hold of the steamship Tanamo, im-- , mediately below the stateroom of Governor E. Mont Reily of Porto Rico, shortly after the liner sailed from San Juan. Governor Reily refused to comment on the fire, hut a member of his party expressed the belief, which he s?id was shared by the captain of the vessel, that it had been set as the result of plot against the governor by sympathizers of the nationalist party. It was pointed out that Governor Reily had been the object of threatening letters, both before he sailed to take up his duties as governor, and if nee his arrival in Porto Rico. The fire in the hold of the Tanamo was discovered late Tuesday by Gov-no- r Reily himself, but It 'was not until Thursday that It became alarming. Water pumped into the hold in an effort to quench it caused the vessel to list heavily and Captain Herbert Hudson ordered the lifeboats swung out of their davits ready to be launched. Most of the twenty passengers on board were terror stricken, as Ihey were convinced the lifeboats could not weather the heavy seas that were running if it became necessary to puteouT in them. Heroic efforts of the Tanamos crew however beat the fire down so that it was almost extinguished when the steamer arrived late Monday. ' -- . ' , 5 Demonstration Is Halted New York A demonstration of persons opposed to the Porto Rican administration of Governor E. Mont Rei-le- y was broken up Sunday by police when the governor landed from the steamer Tnnamou. Banners carried in the crowd referred to the governor hs an autocrat, to Porto Rico as America Ireland and to the Relley administration as mongrel rule. Members of ttie party denied reports that the governor had used harsh- - methods to the natives and declared that the only criticism of his administration had come from the secessionist group, a small minority. - SANTA FE MAIL CLERK FOILS ROBBER A8 GUN 13 HELD AGAINST BODY; GETS $5,000 Prisoner' Claims He Acted Gallantly In Sparing Life or Railway Employe Because He Saw Man Wae Brave and Unarmed Phoenix, Ariz. The bandit captured here last Tuesday night at the Santa Fe station, following an, attempt to rob a mallear, was Identified by fingerprints Wednesday as Roy Gardner, who recently escaped from the federal penitentiary at McNeils island. According to the police, Gardner admitted his identity. Police Wednesday morning said that, while there was nothing of unusual value in the mail on board the car attacked Tuesday night, a local bank planned to ship $15,000 from here Wednesday, and they believe the wold be robber had been tipped off to the shipment, but got the wrong train. - The mailcar attacked Tuesday night was on Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe train No. 170. The robber boarded the car ten minutes before the train was due to leave for Los Angeles, and It is the theory of local officers that he intended to ride to a nearby station, where, they believe, he had accomplices waiting for him. Herman Inderlied of Phoenix, clerk in charge of the car, said he was not looking when the wouldbe robber got in the car, .and that the first he knew of the others presence was when he felt a gun pressed against his body and turned around to find a masked man holding a revolver against him. Inderlied, who is 6 feet 2 inches tall and weighs about 215 pounds, struck his assailant, took his gun away from him and then sat on him while he waited for officers tQ respond to his. calls. Then-t- he bandit was 'taken to the county jail, where he said he was R. P. Nelson ofyChicago. Inderlied went out with his car Tuesday night. While Interlled was holding his prisoner, the latter said, Well, youve earned your $5000 tonight, referring to a standing reward offered to mail clerks for the capture of mall bandits. Another Santa Fe train was standing on a track at the local station, just a few feet from No. 170, and a Southern Pacific train, with two marine guards in the mailcar, was at the Southern Pacific station, a quarter of a block away, when Interlied was attacked. Interlled, who returned to Phoenix Wednesday, was called to the police station to Identify the prisoner formally as Ms assailant As he approached the prisoner, the latter held out his hand and said, Tfou havent got any hard feelings, have you? Ive got a wife and child at home, Interlied replied. So have I, responded Gardner, and If you5 had had a gun last night your wife would have been a widow today. I never hurt an unarmed man. But next time a gun is stuck against you, you put up your hands. It might not be Roy Gardner behind the gup. San Francisco Roy Gardner escaped from McNeils island, Washington penitentiary, September 5, 1921, by cutting his way through the barbed wire fence during a prison baseball game and running through the fields to cover amid a rain of shots from the guards. Two convicts, former., soldiers at Camp Lewis, serving life sentences for statutory offenses, also made a dash for liberty with Gardner. One of them tfas killed, the other wounded. Big Guns Cause Shakeup Los Angeleg Residents of the beach towns near here were jarred into a realization of the effectiveness of the dreadnoughts of the navy when the great war craft entered the stage of direct fire in the gunnery exercises off Catalina island. Direct fire is a discharge of the guns by a eontrol officer in the director towers of t$e dreadnoughts. The test for accuracy requires all guns of the dreadnoughts to be fired simultaneously from the director control. Falling windowpanes, plaster and broken glassware and china In homes twenty miles away testified that the big guns had some kick. Prince of Wales in India India Coincident with a procession escorting the Prince of Wales through the city of Bombay Wednesday, serious disturbances occurred in the native quarter, attributed by the authorities to agitation by followers of Mahatma Gandhia, the Hindu noncooperatlonist leader, resulting In a number of casualties. The procession itself, however, was not marred by any untoward incident. Bombay, Through the fact that a faithful dot MINOR DETAILS ALONE REMAIN TO BE WORKED OUT; REremained by the side of his deal mas SULT CALLED U. S. VICTORY ter and harked continuously in orde1 to attract attention, the body of Adriaj lones, sheepherler, was found near hit 3itterness Between France and Engcamp some distance south of Price. land Growing Intense As Sessions Progress; Japan Well State veterinarian and his assistant! Pleased With Conference nave examined 1400 head of dairy cat tie In Logan city limits and found nc The conference of reactors. In Millard county 1600 head Washington is practically over. All of dairy cattle have been examined and Washington .hat remains to be done is minor and only four reactors were found. lespite present superficial quarrels and There will be $1,000,000 worth oi jickerings, the results could be written oday. These results will be: road work fald out for the unemployeo 1. The imitation of naval constructin Utah within the next ninety days, 1) the federal government meets the pro or!, plus measurably scrapping the expositions of Utah In regard to starting sting units. 2. The postponement an(l not imposnew work In this state. sibly the prevention of an American-Japaneswar. Fifty thousand dollars worth oi 3. The acceptance on the part ol property was destroyed in Salt Iak s 3ach country of a set of abstract City by boys and girls during Hallow form east in without the far any een week, according to Commissionei of guarantee for their application. Arthur Barnes. 4. In some way, not yet quite clear, e Lhe elimination of the Whitney, beet dumps or loading sta illiance. tions, or taken any action toward tak. The price of the first achievement Ing over the beets contracted for. Thi is the surrender by the United States th recites further that complaint farmers gave notes for stock in th of the power placed in Its hands by the last war to become the supreme company and never received certifl cates or other consideration for them. naval country of the world. The price of the second result will oe the recognition of the special rights In the district court at Logan suit has been filed against the Pioneer Su ind interests of Japan in all of the far but particularly In Manchuria, gar company in behalf of the farmer sast, to by the who had contracted with it for fhe de such recognition duly testified x Brit- on Great dt surrender the part livery of beets, to annul the contract sin and the United States of that nav-l- l on the ground that the company had power which would permit successaot erected the promised factory al i . ful challenge. States The United which the price As a result of the $4,150,000 loan tc will receive in return for the acceptsugar companies of the intermountaiu ance of the third point will be a Jastates by the war finance corpora tior to retire from Shan. panese agreement it Washington, Utah sugar beet farmers and from Siberia. The disappear- - . ire receiving $2,'S80,('00 In payment foi :ung alliance- "Of" their first consignment of beets deliv snee will be the compensation that Mr. sred. Hughes will receive for not pressing lie far eastern question as it had been Federal profilBTIion agents uncovered it would be pressed in the expected ane of the largest illicit distilling leginning. plants ever founl In tEH state, in Sail These results will be regarded in the Lake City, at 47 South Fifth West St United States as a great victory for n Two In full were found stills Mr.Hughesand for American diplomacy operation. Approximately 100 gallons m the continent of diplomacy. On the were manufacturel each twenty-fou- i the Washington of .ontinent Europe nours. onference has already been hailed as ' i victory for British diplomacy even A controversy which may lead to a than nore completed and lawsuit has arisen between the Sail hat of the Paris conference. Lake City commission and the county In Great Britain there will be a tend-;nc- y commission as a result of the citys to depreciate British achievement announced refusal to pay the county ind that no greater curb has regret 1919 f2698 for weed eradication during on Japan, no serious effort )een placed and 1920. The citys refusal to pay the y nade to reduce French arms, and :laim has been approved by the city no closer association between the commission. , United States and Great Britain acNevertheless, the tually That farmers, produce buyers and British arranged.will rejoice in the espeople railroads seek a better understanding cape from a naval competition with in manifest by a meeting of the Bonne .he United States, which they could ville irrigation district called by Gov. lot afford, or from a voluntary surren-le- r ernor Mabey, president of the disof sea supremacy to which they trict. The creation of a better spirit :ould not reconcile themselves. of is the chief purpose of Not improbably the Washington conthe meeting. , ference will be instantly attacked by liberals the world over nany Representatives of the Utah state is offering no relief for existing farm bureau will attend the third anof the world and representing nual national convention of the Ameri. ao forward step toward international can Farm Bureau federation to be held association or toward the league of at Atlanta, Georgia. Efforts will he made by the delegates to have Sail . On the other hand there will be a Lake selected as the meeting place for general disposition in this country and the Woman's National Foundation England to accept Mr. Hughes estimate ind regard the Washington conference Thirty-tw- o states of the union and is a first step in the direction of intwelve toreign countries are representternational understanding. Mr. Hughed by students attenling the Univer- es conception that the way to begin sity o Utah this year. The foreign was begin, and that the limitation of countries represented at the Utah in- laval armaments was the one specific stitution are Argentina, Mexico, Nor- md definite thing which could be done way, Denmark, Scotland, Canada, Hol- las prevailed, has made the conference ton, France, Japan, England, Armenia what it has been, and the ultimate and Greece. The Philippine islands success or failure will depend on and Hawaii are also represented. whether, as Mr. Hughes believes, the present session proves a beginning or That the highway between Hurri- m isolated incident. cane, Utah, and Fredonia, Ariz., may One further consequence of the be improved so that Zion national park Washington conference is likely to be and the north rim of the Grand can- .he final dissolution of yon can be connected, the Southern ties. The bitterness here between the Utah and Northern Arizona Road asnations has been more acute than Mohave s sociation has been formed. M. Briand and known. generally county. Ariz., has $10,000 to spend on dr. Balfour, for example, have never the road. Utah help will be forthcom ailed upon each other or met except Ing, it is said. n the accident of the conference or . n social occasion. French support of Lloyd Hoaglin, groceryman of Salt he American thesis in the matter of Lake, put $400 in a paper sack anl submarines has aroused a British re placed it in a hole in the floor of his sentment which is likely to disclose store building for safe keeping. The tseif in a startling fashion after thn money had disappeared when he went onference. to get It later. Acting upon the advice of a stranger who said he had dreamGovernor Assassinated ed that he saw the money beneath a BUenos Aires Doctor Amable Jones, window about 50 feet from the place It had been hidden, Hoaglin removed governor of the province of San Juan, was assassinated Monday by Wen arm-iflooring to this spot and recovered all with rifles as he was alighting from but $13 of his $400 in a rats nest. Some of the bills and checks were chewed in automobile. A friend who w as with aim also was killed. The assassination Slightly. s attributed to politics. e IN QUESIIOII prin-riple- Anglo-Japanes- UTAH SECRETARY OF NATIONAL WOOLGROWERS ASSOCIATION RETURNS FROM CAPITAL RESOLUDISCUSSES MEETING TION CONDEMNING STRIFE AND CRIME IN IRELAND I T ' Reaction In Market Line to Bring Wool Unionist .Party In Session at Liverpool Business Back to Former Days; Indorses With Reservations the More Free Wool to , No Negotiations Now On Between Be Admitted to Country j' British and Irish Liverpool The Unionist partys attitude toward the Irish settlement negotiations with the question of Ulster foremost, was under debate Thursday at a gathering of Unionists here the National Conference of Unionist party, attended by 2000 delegates. ' v.f Lord Derby, who was electect presl-densaid that he did not disguise from himself that fact that it would require any act, any intelligence that he possessed to keep the conservative party together. The main business before the conference was a resolution moved by Colonel John Gretton, member of parliament forRutlandshlre, calling upon the conference to record its condemnation of the Ibng continued ascendancy of crime and rebellion in Ireland and resolve that no settlement of the Irish question is acceptable which-- does not respect absolutely the position acquired by U1- -. ster and provide every safeguard essential for imperial security and the protection of the loyalists In the west and south of Ireland. Lord Farnham and General Prescott Decie presented the case against negations with the Sinn Fein on behalf of that section of the southern Irish Unionists-opposeto the policy of Lord Middleton and his party, who are in disagreement with the Ulster demand for separate dominions for north and South Ireland. The speakers contended that peace purchased from the Sinn Fein by the weakness of the government would contain no element of permanence. Colonel Gretton, in moving hts resolution, referring to a proposed amendment by Sir Laming' Worthington-Evans- , secretary for war, wishing success to the Irish peace negotiations, said that the watering down of the motion would ultimately lead to the disintegration and destruction of the Conservative-Unioniparty. . UnionColonel Martin Archer-Sheist member of parliament for Finsbury, in seconding fhe Gretton motion, said that as soon as the negotiations broke down, as they surely would, the Conservatives should leave the coafffion and set up a government which would really govern the country. I am sick and tire! of a government that is carrying out a radical policy and which is led by a radical leader, he explained. t, st e, Salt Lake Woolmen throughout the United States have every reason to rejoice, according to Frank R. Marshall, secretary of the National Woolgrowers association, who has returned to Salt Lake from Washington, D. C. The market has reacted strongly to the assur-tha- t no more free wool .now. can be admitted to the country under the present administration through the unprecedented action of both houses in extending the emergency tariff law until the regular tariff bill can be passed. This puts the market in a position of stability, said Mr. Marshall Thurs-lay- . Until this action was taken there was always the possibility of a period of free wool. There is a hugh quantity of foreign wool in bonded warehouses at ports of entry. If one hour elapsed admitting free wool there would have been a great flood. One small importer said that one hour of free wool would have netted him $10,000. The action of congress shows the governments interest in the agriculture of the country. It shows an appreciation of keeping our farms, herds and flocks in condition to supply our requirements. Prices have" been Improving gradually for several weeks. Now the uncertainty Is removed, things are back to the basis of demand in relation to supply and possible imports. While the emergency tariff remains, grease wools must pay 15 cents per pound ; skirted wools 30 cents, and scoured wools, 45 cents. According to the department of agricultures report issued on September 30 the amount of wool on hand in the country Is four hundred million pounds, which is much less than many believed. This Is a very little more than the normal stock for this time of the year, Wool is being consumed in this coun- try at a rapid rate. Most of the larger mills have orders that will last only until February. It seems certain that the wool market must take a pronounced upward tendency. - The woolgrowers were the first ones to feel the deflation of May, 1920, and it Seems now as If they would be the first to recover. The regular tariff bill will be passed to the satls'fac-tio- ii of the woolgrowers. Mr. Marshall was one of the committee of leading woolmen and agriculturists of the United States who appeared before the senate finance committee to urge the Immediate exten-tio- n May Pardon Eugene Debs of the emergency tariff bill until Washington Consideration "Is being the passage of the regular tariff bill given to the pardoning of Eugene V. on wool. Debs, imprisoned Socialist leader, on Solons Can Go Limit it was said Tuesday special grounds, Washington The supreme court dein administration quarters. The parcision in the case of Senator Newberry innot will don, if granted, however, of Michigan makes It unnecessary for volve extensions of a general amnesty a candidate for the United States sene ofto Others in prison for war-timate to file - any expense settlement fenses, it was stated. whatever in connection with either his nomination or election. Attorney General Daugherty ruled Thursday, In an Cost Workers on Strike Genoa A general strike proclaimed informal opinion to Representative here, cause! by differences over reduc- Luce of Massachusetts of the house tions in wages, has extended over the subcommittee on elections. Under the ruling, candidates for the senate are Ligurian coast region. The men af- given a free rein to spend as much fected Include the port employes, mak- money as they please without accounting it impossible to handle shipping, ing so long as they remain within other and It is feared the movement will requirements of the corrupt practices act spread to other Italian ports. ' . , -- fin-ill- na-;io- ns. Anglo-Frenc- h :o d |