OCR Text |
Show " i I. ; nT' 'k -- A f i. 'rc V! 4 .as r - t a. - v t7&: fff'-V- 1 IMS Lttrj cJf If waat rr L,1 cl L- Geuctf i - -i fzLTLzj la rfmoajtaoM wii act ami fSdwy. Jt - .,JL t,- -. ; - , trJf ' A -- ' j '? T - y - ...V Art Tax a r r D Sdtb? If not please remember will wir subscription help make . this paper strong a thing necessary far ao unsurpassed news K. service. COSHER OF RICH COUNTY Tin, SATURDAY, RANDOLPH, RICH CC YEAR H 9 '-- 0. - v ,yJvs' REACHES BYEST TWENTY-SIXT- ' .vtr A y w p 7f. s s v n. - .i Mi ( XV, ; y JiW' y, W NUMBER 20 MARCH 31, 1923 r STAND TRIAL WITHDRAWAL OF TROOPS NATED BY CHANCELLOR AS BA8IS OF SETTLEMENT DISTRICT COURT OVERRULES B. . R. HARRIE8 DEMURRER AND MOTION TO STRIKE Chancellor 8ays World Realizes Germany Impotent In Face of Present Strength of France; Called Insulting Affront Elevator Drops From the Third Floor Of Pittsburg Building; Sixty Injured In Colllson On Trolley Casa Will Be Carried to 8upreme Tribunal on Question of Juris-- , diction; Ruling A Point in Favor of Plantlffs Wilesbarre, Pa. Two men were killed and several injured Tuesday when the packing house of the Belln mills of the Dupont Powder company in the woods near Moosic, Pa., blew ceed. completely destroying the mill. In a long speech Thursday, night up,Relief was rushed troqi Scranton the chancellor reiterated the govern- and Pittston. ments position, asserting that It had The exact of injured will not authorized mediation by any third not be knownnumber until all doctors make party, bat that on the other hand it their reports, as every available had received numerous "feelers from house was turned into a temporary unauthorized quarters. He asserted hospital. r viothese that proposals constiute "a Considerable damage was .done to lation of German honor or common other buildings at the plant sense. Munich. Unconditional evacuation of the Ruhr is designated by Chancellor Cano as the fundamental premise from which any discussion aiming to end the present conflict must pro- Referring between Premiers Poin- tions suggested no progress toward a solution of the Ruhr question. The official communique issued after the conference failed, in the chancellors opinion, to dissipate the suspicion that France had not abandoned her aspiration to annex territory. More recent readings of the Brussels discussions, Herr Cuno asserted, have Impressed German officials with the thought that they aimed at a complete overthrow of the Versailles treaty. The German people, he said would stoutly oppose the suggestion of a buffer state fronting the Rhine. The Chancellor declared that the world by this time probably had awakened to a realization that it is a disarmed and Impotent Germany which requires security rather than France, which now commands the worlds greatest land foroes and the most powerful air rReetf : Pittsburg. Fourteen girl employes were injured, some perhaps seriously, when a passenger elevator dropped JUDGE EXPLAINS FORMATLCjf OF from the third floor to the basement COMMITTEE IN INVESTIGAof the Murdoch, Kerr company buildTION BY LEGISLATURE ing Tuesday. j Trucks of a nearby department store took the girls to local hospitals. People of 8eetlon Dependent ' Gin Road Inaulted and lntlml$ Springfield, Mass. Sixty persons ?' ated. First Witness. were reported injured when two Tolls Probore J streetcars collided in East Springfield Tuesday. All the citys ambulances were summoned to the scene and notification sent to hospitals to be ready to care way to work. French Suspend German Papers -- Coblenz. Of the 1,450 newapapers public ed lit the Bhlneland and the Ruhr, ,405 have bees suppressed by die occupation euthorities for periods mylu.from ihree lays Jtq aweral according to figures. Suspensions in the lee Jam Menacee Lowlands Sioux City, Iowa. Held by an ice Bhlneland total 298. Forty three of gorge five miles in size formed at the Journals have more than once Brass fields island, south of here, been forbidden to publish, while 68 printsd outside of these spring flood waters of the Missouri newspapers areas been denied the right to have river threatened to sweep through parts of this city unless the Jam is circulate In occupied territory. broken. Already the backed up waDope Blamed For Killing ter that continued to rise while efforts were made to break up the Chicago. Another ghastly tragedy t dope was revealed Thursday in a gorge by dynamiting, has caused one deaths Several other persons were fulclde pact in which Mrs. Enda Robreported drowned and hundreds of inson, 40 years old, murdered her 72 head of livestock, implements and year old mother, Mrs. Wm. Charles The Woolson, with a razor and then enddwellings were carried away. property damage was estimated in ed her own life. From a family of excess of $100,000. wealth la Buffalo, N. Y, they had been reduced through the slavery of The tragedy Get $40,000 From Teller and Guards drugs to destitution. East SL Louis. Samuel D. Barker occurred In a cheap rooming house. a teller of the Southern Illinois National Bank, reported to police that New Plain for Nominating Senators bandits robbed him and two guards Ottawa A proposal for a nominatof $40,000 at the East approach of ed senate, whereby one-hal- f would be the municipal free bridge Friday. named by the dominion government The bandits escaped. The mone and be known as dominion senators, was being taken to the southern Illi- while tho remainder would be nomnois institution from the First Na- inated by the provincial governments tional bank in SL Louis, Barber said. and bo known as provincial senators, was submitted Thursday to the house .Massachusetts Man 103, Dies , of commons by W. S. Fielding, minGreat Barrington, Mass. Washing- ister of finance. ton BisselL believed to be the oldest Mason, oldest college graduate and Committee Will Investigate Budget oldest retired lawyer la the United Paris. The finance committee of States died here Friday. He would the senate has decided to take up have been 108 years old April 16. He the examination of the 1923 budget as was graduated from Union college, received from the but with chamber, Schnectady, N. T., la the class of the firm intention of realising equili1846 and practiced law la New York brium by other means than a loan, state and Connecticut notably by energetic compression of expenses and strict repression of tax Franchise Granted for Bay Bridge evasions and frauds. San Francisco. A franchise has to Howard, Harrington been granted ft Ash of Kansas City, Mo., for the Standard OH 8tarta On Alaska Well Anchorage Alaska. The Standard construction of a bridge across the lower end of San Francisco bay at Oil company, which is prospecting in the Cold Bay field, southwest Alaska, Dumbarton Point by the supervisor of San Mateo county, near here. Con- has commenced drilling its first well struction of the bridge, whicih will according to wireless advices recost approximately $2500,000, will be- ceived here. Equipment like that used by the Standard Oil company gin immediately, it was announced. has arrived for the Associated Oil company, which was recently forced . French Measure Fixes Rente Paris. The senate Friday voted a to suspend on its first well when conjill, 194 to 88, prohibiting the state hard rock was struck and this trom leasing any of its buildings cern is to resume work immediately. irlth a rental of above 46,000 francs Inmate Confesses Anon without the passage of a special The real purpose of the measure. Santa Rosa, Calif. Colonel A. bill is to prevent the government Smeeton, superintendent of toe Salvatrom leasing the former Saint Sulpice tion Army orphanage, near Healds-buri em inary to the. archbishop of Paris. Calif., which was partially destroyed by fire early Monday, an" Frdnch to Relnforos Ruhr Troopa nounced Wednesday that a Paris. The French troopa in the boy inmate of too orphanage men that he started toe fire bejtuhr will be relnferced by 20,000 within a few days. War minister cause ha "wanted to get away and Maginot anaouaeed Friday iu the hated to go to school. The fire chamber of deputies. tape riled approximately 200 children. ' Harrison, Ark. The depend .me of this section of Arkansas on the Mistor many injured. Most of the pass- souri ft Arkansas railroad, together engers were factory employes on their with the increase in toe BnrJmr of months, German semi-offici- al g, con-teas- ed depredations along toe railroad started the movement whlch.resulted in the formaton of toe "citizens, committee according to the testimony of County Judge B. MasslnH, ths.first witness called Wednesday 'ore tha ftrkanzas , legislative , commute diserdeto pn&$he . road. ' The legislative committee is inquiring into conditions along toe road incident to a strike which began two years ago and tha lynching several months ago of E. O. Gregor, a striker. "For more than two years the people in this country were bulldozed, bullragged, insulted, boycotted and intlmidi&ted, Judge Masslnglll testified. "We got tired of tt, and it aeemad we had to take the matter In hand to stay where we are. We felt that these strikers could leave cheaper than we could. 'We dug out this wilderness. They didnt They left The strikers imagined themselves a favored few. A brakeman walking out of our committee room remarked: I cant live on $6.80 a day. That is more money than I aver made In a day. "Three or four hundred strikers felt they could run this country regardless of three or four hundred thousand persons. "We cannot live without this railroad. Without it we could have no industries. t te Ruhr Sltuatloti Being Discussed Paris. A definite move by labor and socialist parliamentary groups to request the British, French, Belgian and Italian governments to place the Rnhr situation in the hands of the league of nations was foreshadowed Wednesday following a conference of delegates representing these political factions in toe several legislative bodies. Spokesman of the British and the French, Italian and Belgian socialists, deciding that a settlement of the controversy could only be effected "throngh American intervention or a decision of the league of nations, came to the conclusion that toe question of league assistance should be brought up In the British house of commons and in the chambers of the other governments. Free Staters Raid Homes Dublin. Irish criminal intelligence department detectives carried out an extensive series of raids here Tuesday nighL Ten houses were visited and Important descoveries made, it is announced . and numerous arrests were effected. In one house the detectives discovered the headquarters of the irregular publicity bureau and seised a larga quantity of republican Twenty-on- e propaganda literature. persona were arrested including P. J. Lyach, publicity director and former editor of the Sunday Independent When tha detectives enterd the headquarters soma of tha occupants were engaged In typing copies of too Dally Republican bulistin. Salt Lake City. County Sheriff Benjamin B Harries most stand trial In the Third district court to establish right and title to the office he now holds. This 1 embodied in tho decis ion of Judge William M. McCrea of the Third district court, who Saturday overruled the demurrer to the amended complaint filed by sixty-nin- e citzens of Salt Lake county seeking to oust Harries from the office of sheriff on the grounds of religions Interference in politics which brought about his election. Barring unforscen intervention the case will go to trial within a short time. The ruling of Judge MoCrca was a point In favor of the concidered DIRECTOR OF ORGANIZATION plaintiffs seeking to have the election DECLARES PEOPLE ARE IN The of Sheriff Harries annulled. FAIR WAY TO BE ROBBED first skirmish was won by Harries when the demurrer to the orignal complaint was sustained by the court Federal Grand Jury Is Urged to Hear In overruling the demurrer Judge McBpreekela Claim Hoover DepartCrea likewise denied, all of the moment Alda Gamblers; Manly tions made by counsel for the plain8ends Letter to Harding tiff to strike. The original complaint in the ouster proceedings was filed the latter part Wasiugton. Demands for an in- of December, 1922, and there were vestigation of fluctuations In the su-g- then ninety-thre- e plaintiffs to the acmarket made daring the closing tion. Immediately following the pubday of congress by Western sena- lication of toe names of the plainof them withdrew. tors were revived Thursday by pub- tiffs twenty-foIn clerk of the court the petitioning Presito of a lication letter written of their names for withdrawal the dent Harding by Basil Manly, direc- each set forth that he had signed tor of the Peoples Legislative serv- a petition relating to the Harries American ice, charging that the matter, but did not know It would ins fair way --of being involve court action. bendftt ot and profiteers. sugar gamblers 8enator 8. D. Nlohelaen Dies "It la suggested, said Mr. Manly, Denver, Colo. Samuel D. Nicholson whoaa organization was formed by United States senator from Colorado, members of the progressive bloc in died here at 9:15 oclock Saturday. congress, that as one of the first Senator Nicholson had lapsed Into a witnesses the federal grand Jury state of coma shortly before the end should hear Claus Spreckles, presi- and he did not regain consciousness before he succumbed. The malady dent of the Federal Sugar Refining which caused the death of Senator stated company, who has publicly Nicholson was the first serious illness that the sugar gamblers, "aided by he had suffered in his lifetime. In the department of commerce, have his first appeal to physicians, medibeen enabled to rob the American cal science was unable to aid him. For several years preceding his people of millions of dollars. Mr. Manly declared tha trlse in death, Senator Nicholson had experatprices bad their aole basis, "so far ienced slight pains which ha bad as the public is informed, in a state- tributed to indigestion, according to A. Nicholson. ment Issued by the department of his brother, Murdock A robust energetic man, the senator commerce on February 9, which was had given slight heed to the condiinterpreted by "all the newspaper as tion. Three months before his death, perdicting a great shortage of sugar these attacks became more frequent during the coming year, and that al- and painful, but it was not until though Secretary Hoover had de- late in February that Senator Nichoclared the statement was misinter- lsons condition became such that he preted, the opening sentence was so appealed for medical advice. worded as to Bend prices leaping Piute Indian Trouble Ended upward." Bluff. With the exception of Wife Fourteen Makes Appearance Sanups Boy and Old Posey, both of Wilkesbarre, Fa. Another wife of whom may be dead in Comb Waeh or miles away, toe entire band of Charles W. Davis, alias Taylor, Civil war veteran who is held renegade Plutes are under arrest here pending complete Investigation Surrounding connties have been notiof his amazing matrimonial career, fied by United States Marshal J. Ray turned up Saturday making fourteen Ward to be on the lookout for Old Inwives definitely known to the police, Posey. There are now ninety-tw- o who now believe he may have had a dians, including squaws and papooses, dozen more. Mrs Emma Rhoades of under guard here and In Blending. Binghamton, N. Y, arrived here to The last of toe renegades were Those confront Davies, who she said, mar- brought to Bluff Saturday. ried two years ago in New York, and surrendering include Jim and Jim's Little Boy, Charleys Boy, Poseyk deserted her, taking $1000 in cash. Boy, two of Joe Bishops Boys, San ups Little Boy, Old Poke's Brother. York In New Wolf Causes Panic At least four of these captured durNew York. Hundreds of women the fight will be Indicted for ining turnthen and children fled in panic, and prosecuted by the fedsurrection ed t6 join policemen and animal eral It ia not known for government keepers in pursuing a large timber certain whether Posey is dead or not in wolf that escaped from Its cage Marshal Ward will keep a force in Central Park zoo Saturday when a the field ,untll all doubt is dispelled. to separate keeper opened the door two animals that were fighting. The chase lasted an hour and the wolf Occupation . Expensive to Germany Berlin. The allied occupation of was captured after a patrolman had the Rhineland for the past four years sent two bullets Into Its shoulder. has cost Germany 4,500,000,000 gold marks, according to a statement made 2 Killed, 7 Hurt In Elevator Crash Des Moines, Iowa. Two persons to the reichstag Saturday by Minister were killed and seven injured, per- of the Treasury Albert This total to the end of last haps fatally Saturday afternoon when expenditure up an elevator In tho Randolph hotel year did not include expenditures for fell eight stories. Every victim of occupation of the territories taken as the accident save one, the negro ele- sanctions by toe allies or the cost vator boy, was a member of the Hill of maintaining the allied control comor Hoskins family of Earlham, Iowa missions. The occupying forces in who had gathered In Dea Moines tor the Rhineland were more than 100 farewell party before the Hills de- per cent greater than the number of which Germany garrisoned parted for a vialt to California. Mrs troops Vito said the Harry W. Hill, wife of an Earlham this area before the war, minister. was killed instantly. banker, ar -- ur peo-plwerrob-rfori- e $ Burglars entered the stor West at Mona, eight miles north of Nephi, and removed mer' chandise to the value of $5.00. NephL of J W. Salt Lake. The establishment of a shirt factory for the employment of convict labor In toe state prison was given toe approval of Governor Mabey. ! care and Theunis, Herr Cuno expressed the opinion that these conversa- From All Parts of UTAH PLANT IN PENNSYLVANIA BLOWS FROM UP; RELIEF RUSHED 8CRANTON TO VICTIMS DESIG- ilNewo Notes m Ogden. John Lobello, 48, was sent to the city jail for four months by Judge Roberts, following conviction on a charge of stealing a bicyole. Salt Lake Opening for filing o$ two plats of land in Grand connty, near Thompsons station, is announced by Gould B. Blakeley, registrar of the United States land office. 1 Wellaville. Jphn A. Leatham, 61, mmeber of toe house of representatives in the recently adjourney legislature, died at his residence here. Ogden. John W. Klaner, 52 year of age, suffered serious injuries when he was struck by n streetcar in front of his office. Provo. Fire at the Page stood, located on the canyon road about a half mile out of the city limits, charred the floor and the baseboard. Salt Lake The price of beet sugar on the local market decreased 40 cents a bag. Some of the larges; stores quote sugar at $10.89. St George. Arrangements will bo completed within the next tew days by which thirty convicts will be transferred from toe state prison to Washington county, where they will b used in the construction of state highways. Logan. In the city court Lavere and Allen Rocks were found guilty by a Jury of stealing hay from Eugene Nelson of Newton. Huntington. A recent application of the city councfi for the water sup- -, ply from twozprtngs in Huntington canyon for culinary purposes has been granted. Huntington. A poet of the American Legion was organized in Huntington with the initiation of eight former soldiers. Fountain Green. The Fountain Green Woolgrowers association has offered its wool clip, consisting of 800,000 pounds of fine medium and halfblood staple wool for sale. American Fork. It la reported that a group are trying to get possession of TImpanogas cave, toe Commercial club have appointed a committee to investigate this rumor. Hungtington. Mayor Anton Nielson has announced the purchase of 700 feet of fire hose and a car to use as equipment Farmington. Five community power spraying machines have been ordered by the Davis County Farm bureau and are expected to be here in a tew days. Logon. There ore now 1,250 pounds of poisoned steamed rolled oats mixed and sacked ready for toe spring drive on rodents, according to H. P. Mathews, connty crop pest inspector. Provo. A fractured skull, a dislo cated elbow and bruises about tos legs and body were suffered by Albert Olsen, 12, when be fell in front of a roller need in leveling a ball fire-fighti- field. Brigham City. The Boxelder Poul- try association is now fully organized and in active operation. The local association is in affiliation with the State Poultry association. Price. Mike Paglakley, third coal mine striker to be tried on charges growing out of toe killing of Deputy Sheriff A. P. Webb during toe strike last spring, was found guilty of voluntary manslaughter. Kaysville. T. C. Forbes of this city was accidently killed while returning from a rabbit hunt It is believed that Forbes was climbing a fence when his shotgun caught and discharged itself. Ogden. Joe Trujilla, was arrested here for toe sheriff of Morgan county. He is alleged to have 'stolen three suits of clothes and an overcoat from a rooming bouse In Morgan. Provo. The recent scare concerning toe outbreak of hog cholera on Provo Bench similar to toe epidemics of last year, were dissipated following a visit of inspection by Dr. G. L. Jones Ogden. Ogden City was presented with a bill of $&M from a motorist who said he had to pay that amount to bo polled trom tho mud hols te no of tho citys street. . V |