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Show News Notes I From All Parts of UTAH I SON, 80, U. S. SENA-- E 1395, DIES WHILE TO HIS HOME Solon Left Washington by Niece and Insur. ance Commissioiner; Death Ends Career Long Senator Knute Nelson Minnesota died on a Pennsylvania train near York Saturday night York, Pa. of According to a message received by trainmaster here, the cause of death was heart disease. Senator Nelson left Washington on the Dominion express at 7 p. m. Death occurred shortly after the train left Baltimore. Senator Nelson was accompanied by his niece and by the commissioner of insurance of Minnesota. Senator Nelson was one of the most colorful figures in the senate. He had been in politics since 1SG8, had twice served as governor of Minnesota and was first elected to the United States senate in I860. t Short and thick set. Senator Nelson was physically of the old striking type when in his prime. extraction, strong Of Norwegian the Minnesota and will, personality "been senator had prominent in the for years. organization Republican Elected first to the senate in 1895, Senator Nelson was reelected, in 1901, E. C. Greening, ad hold-rother- s, Rufus er was allege. but to ready Famous to prevail ti at the pier. flltllHUHMIiUUIUtHMtUUttltHUlHHIlUUnWUlMUMIUNIWItHtUMIIUIUIUUtHtWUiiUlllUIUIUUtilMIMHUlimiimiMUMtllUalt Wayne Cook, of Vlvanla, was elected president il of the Daughters of the fiean Revolution after one of the brest elections in the history of . society. Anthony Cbauncey M Depew. entered upon his ninetieth year Monday. The grund old man of American politics has seen, four wars and their after-matjit- k He has been a friend of 'juet- - the statesman, and Joe ldft5?3ff4tk,, Speaker assembly. .and governor's private car 'were hattlby a traffic officer in Solano county while trying, to catch Up with a number of legislators who were making a trip to Napa. Goldie Hughes, little girl, Is in St. Joseph Infirmary at Houston, Texas, in a comatose condition, the result, according to Dr. It. L. Bradley of acute dilation of the heart following her feat of 54 hours of continuous dancing. "more' than tenTcrefT oT land, has been sold to San Francisco capitalists, for hotel' and il' business purposes, it was announced. The was tot stated, but is believed to approximate $750,000. y;V In cooperation with- the federal government's drive against fake oil companies In Texas, tfie Los Angeles district, attorney's office - announces that a widespread investigation will be begun ; Into ; the, operations of mushroom oil promotion' companies In southern California.. ? J.- ' . on - FOREIGN Advices received by the state at Washington department from Lisbon, Portugal, said the Portuguese government had ratified the two nine-powtreaties negotiated by the Washington armament conference. This ratification completes the approval by the respective powers of the armaments conference covenants, with the single exception of France. The German government has sent a note of protest to the French, British and Belgian governments against the explusion of Prince von Hatzfeldt, the German commissioner in the occupied territory, whereby the population, it is declared, is deprived of the last means of making known the sufferings they endure at the hands of the occupying forces. Sir John Maffey, chief commission, er for the Northwest provinces, Is ex. pected to arrive in Peshawar with Molly Ellis, the girl who was recovered from the band of Afghans by whom she was kidnaped. The commissioner is credited with the intention of punishing the tribesmen responsible for the murder of the girl's mother as well ns for other crimes.. It Is said that the murder and the kidnaping were in fulfillment of a vow of vengeance made by the leader of the marauders. - ' ' r t ' ' k. ," Coney C. Slaughter" former cashier of f the wrecked Mercantile bank lueblo, Colo, reached Denver t. Catherine, New Countess of Carnarvon er in custody ot deputy United ' States Marshalls, from Philadelphia where Jta was arrested after a search of t eight years, ; ; 4,VV This Is a portrait, just arrived from overseas, of Henry George Alfred Marius Victor Francis Herbert, sixth earl of Carnarvon. All his life people will point to him and say: "There goes Lord Carnarvon! You know, Tuts tomb Pharaohs curse and all that!" Yes; he Is the son of the Lord Carnarvon who uncovered the In the Valley tomb of of the Kings, near Luxor, and died soon after. Medical science says he died of pneumonia following blood poisoning from the bite of an Insect. The superstitions are that he died because of the "curse of the Pharaohs on those who should disturb their last sleep. Americans have an additional Interest In the young earl from the fact that In July, 1922, he married Miss Catherine T. Wendell of New York, who has relatives in Boston and Chicago. Not very much is known here of the new earl. He had some sort of official duties In India, whence he hastened to his dying fathers bedside In Cairo. He Is immensely rich. His father owned about 36,000 acres, including HIghclere His mother, the dowCastle, In Hampshire and Bretby Park, Burton-on-Trenager Lady Carnarvon, is a godchild of the late Alfred Rothschild and, it Is said, was substantially remembered in his will. Lord Carnarvon Inherits his father's racing stud, which was prominent on the English turf. general ,Four men andawomnn were rescued from a disabled seaplane tossed (or hours 40 miles off the coust One of the survivor, Robert L. Dewey, second cousin of the late Admiral Dewey, swam ashore after the plane had floated to within a mile of the beach and reported, the predicament of his companion. Ticketing of the White House in behalf of amnesty for imprisoned war law Violators, was resumed Tuesday, a delegation representing the world war veterans appearing at White Bouse gates with an American flag and banners carrying amnesty ap. peal. ... Fire which broke out In a store room of the Madison square garden at New York for & time threatened destruction of, the garden as wellas the animals and shiw equipment of the Rlngling circus now playing at The Garden. For the first time in its history the house of commons debated a English John Credon of Philadelphia whose bill and at the exliquor prohibition auto crashed into a crowd killing a of the arguments on It killed piration old was to 17 year sentenced girl, the measure by rejecting its second serve from 4 to 8 years in the peni230 to 14. The bill was that ' reading, . tentiary for the act,' recently introduced by Edwin vScrym-gecTwo firemen were injured and loss of Dundee, who has devoted Of between $400,000 and $500,000 was his life to the cause of prohibition. aused by fire in two .warehouses in The celebration of Romes 2G70th ' tti'ehicago stockyards. , blrtday wras perhaps the most solemn Eighlpffison sentences and fines In the long history of the eternal 500 were Imposed by city. Premier Mussolini promugated totaling federal J ndgeHjjn Fleet of New York a decree establishing April 21 as 'on 20 Individuals and 23 corporations, Instead of May 1, and thus all engaged in. the pottery industry, the traditional date of the city's who were convicted of conspiracy in foundation becomes a national holirestraint of trade. day. An portrait of Catherine, Countess Carnarvon, Is reproduced herewith. She was Miss Catherine T. Wendell of New York. Her marriage to Lord Portchester, only son of Lord Carnarvon, fifth earl of Carnarvon, took place July 17, 1922. The tragic death of the fifth earl recently at Cairo after uncovering the tomb of at Luxor, Egypt, focuses worldwide attention upon the young sixth earl and his countess, and Interest In the young couple Increases. Lady Carnarvon Is the daughter of the late Jacob Wendell, a New York commission merchant. He was a broth er of Professor Barrett Wendell of Harvard. The new countess has other relatives in Boston and In Chicago. The wedding In London was a brilliant society function, with a thousand guests. Including Ambassador Harvey and the prince of Wales and titled men and women galore. The Carnarvons are likely to remain long in the limelight, since the tomb In the Valley of the Kings has been sealed up to await cooler of weather In the fall. And nobody knows whether or not It contains the mummy of the Pharaoh. te W. Z. Foster Is Now Most Notorious Red ur , $n, La-bord- . . A - Four fliers weer almost instantly inseriously . killed and , two others jured at Dayton, 91110,, when a Mar. tin . air service bomber which .was leaving McCook'., field for Langley Field, Vu., fell into the Great Miami ,s , . river. The most serious , forest fire in many years is sweeping through the scrub oak and second growth forest of Michigan near the city of Pullman. Several homes already have been destroyed and villages threaten, ' x . ' ; - -' ad. " t - 1 orMembers of Italian communist ganization were arrested, charged with plotting the assassination of leaders of the Fascist!. According to police the conspirators plan to create a reign of terror and to murder the Fascistl chiefs under cover of the general excitement. Bulgaria has appealed to the Unit, td States through Ambassador Harvey to use its influence to end the deportation and mistreatment of Bulgarian inhabitants of western Trace at the hands of the Greeks. Logan. The first boy scouts In the which was organized weekly meetings and Dads patrol of United States, here is holding studying to pass its tenderfoot examinations. Brigham City. Some anxiety is being felt by the fruit growers of this vicinity as it is not yet determined if rectn cold snaps have injured the fruit crop. lrovo. While digging a posthole, E. M. Paxman unearthed the skeleton of a man. The bones showed every indication of having been buried for many years. Provo. Provo Is experiencing the greatest building boom in its history. Ninety houses are under construction with applications for building permits coming in at the rate of two and three a day. Vernal The Jensen dinosaur quarry Is closed, and regardless of the persistent efforts of the Vernal Commercial club there is grave danger of It being abandoned. world-famo- acciCedar City. Glen Flanigan, dentally shot and killed himself near a sheep camp fifteen miles west of this city. Provo. At a meeting of the "M Ne1907, 1913 and 191S. Senator mens council, plans for a stake baselsons reelection in 1918 was with the ball league wfere outlined. It was anadvice and consent of Woodrow Wilnounced that each ward will play a son, who, though a Democratic presigame with another ward each Saturs dent, placed no obstacle in Nelson way because of the latter's strong support of the AVilson administrations war policies. day. Venial Uintah county has been made party to an action brought in the district court of Duchesne county for the purpose of determining th I. W. W. Strike Spreads two coun San Francisco. The general strike boundary line between the ties. of the Workers Industrial call of the Moab. For the first time since last in additional men World resulted walking out Saturday in Pacific coast September the grand county jail is states. Oregon reported a camp at without an occupant. The Dalles shut down and the West Mt. Pleasant. E. P. Johnson, while Coast Lumbermen's association with from Moroni was severely returning offices in Portland, received a letter bruised anti cut when the steering from the strike committee setting gear of his car broke and the maforth eleven demands. Estimates as chine turned turtle. Washto number of men pn strike in Ogden Seth Blood, 18 years of age ington, as reported by employers of wrere that 10,000 had responded to of Kaysville, was found guilty the strike call, but the I. W. W. headspeeding, In the city court here. He quarters said the number was be- was sentenced to pay a $50 fine. Waterfront tween 20,000 and 30,000. Castle Dale. Parley Beal and two employers in Seattle said the strike sons were severely cut and bruised of the marine workers had produced and their auto demolished when Mr, no noticeable effect. The leaders of Beal who was miscalculated driving, the strike said it was spreading in the turn on the Quitchcumpaw dug. eastern Washington and nothem o way, five miles south of Emery. lumber camps. Instructions have been Ogden. N. Y. Hippodrome Closes for Good and motorNew York. The Hippodrome, the given traffic policemen to stop all cars suofficers cycle home of big spectacles and New Yorks greatest playhouse, closes its spected of transporting liquor to this doors for good Saturday and no Mty. Eureka The Tintic Standard mine longer will its audiences, each representing hallf the states in the Union, of this district has shipped a carload wonder where the diving girls go of ore netting the company $G2,500 when they disappear into the huge for the car. tank and never are seen from the Green River. Final ararngements About front to reach the surface. are being made by D. & R. G. officials 40,000,000 persons are computed to for the building of a 6 stall engine have entered the vast auditorium durhouse here to replace the one desexisof the its ing eighteen years tence. The Hippodrome was erected troyed by fire. on the site of the old Sixth avenue Mayfield. This town Is progresscar barn. The great playhouse will ing with the clam make way for a business structure. town" campaign work. The town has been divided into three districts with Mayor Sentenced To Prison Term a chairman in each district Indianapolis, Ind. Roswell Johnof son, mayor Provo. Gary, Ind. Saturday Joseph Chappel pleaded was sentenced to serve one year and guilty to a charge of fishing without sLx months in prison and fined $2,000 a license and was fined $25 in Judg for violation of liquor laws, in the James B. Tucker's court. United States district court here. Brigham CRy. Sentence of sixty other Gary Johnson, with fifty-foresidents, was convicted of conspiracy days in jail was passed on S E. Bolt to violate the prohibition laws. Three by Judge Fred J. Holton following a of those indicited were granted new plea of guilty to a charge of writing trials. William H. Dunn, former city a check with no funds in the bank Judge of Gary, was sentenced to serve to cover same. a year and a day in prison and fined Ileber City. The installation of a $1,000. splendid type of fire whistle has been completed in Ileber City. It can b Coal Monopoly is Charged In a formal complaint heard for many miles. Washington by the federal trade commission the Salt Lake City. Frank Daniels Northwestern Coal Dock Operators aged 5 was instantly killed when he as-aiion or Minneapolis, its officers fell in front of a fast moving trolley and directors, have been charged with car. conspiracy to suppress competition Wasatch Rosario Martinas is dead and create a monopoly in the sale of anthracite and bituminous coal at and Sabeno Perez i3 wounded and wholesale and retail in Minnesota, missing after a pistol duel fought at camp Wisconsin, North Dakota, South Da- a Union Pacific construction near here. kota and Iowa. Cecil Sails for Home Ogden. The Wyoming Sugar com. New York. Robert Cecil, represenpany at its annual meeting reported tative for South Africa in the league that it had made $100,000 this year of nations, sailed on the Olympic compared with a deficit of $100,000 Saturday after a tour of the United lat year. States which, he said, had convinced The Ogde Ogden. Betterment him that Americans "from Main is now known as the Citizens league street to Wall street were interested to the aunounr. in the league, even though all were league, according ment of the committee. not converts. . Ida--h- clean-hom- e, ur .. . , Tooele. L. Phillips and A. A. Wal. lace both of the key mountain district were fined $250 and $200 respectively on a charge of shooting deer out of season. William Z. Foster, charged with violation of the Michigan law against criminal syndicalism. Is just now the most notorious Red In America. The Jury at St. Joseph. Mich., stood 6 to 0 for 38 ballots. Foster was the first to face trial of the thirty-twmen and women arrested as a result of the raid on the convention of the Communist party of America, held in the lonely dune country near St. Joseph last August. The trial was the first test of the Michigan law against criminal syndicalism, passed during the war. The act makes It a felony punishable by ten years Imprisonment and up to $5,000 fine to advocate sabotage, crime, terrorism or other means of force and violence as a method of accomplishing political or Industrial reform. Foster, of course, regards the disagreement of the Jury as a victory. Others say that the trial has served Its purpose In that It has brought out clearly before the public the theory and practice of the Reds In this country. For Instance, Matthew Woll of Chicago, vice president of the American Federation of Labor, regards with a cold eye the "hero whom Chicago radicals greeted at a massmeeting upon his triumphant return from St. Joseph. "To Ignore Foster now is to destroy the great monster that has been made out of mere tissues of capitalized propaganda, reads his statement. "To disregard him Is to inflict the greatest punishment that can be given him. He and his kind feed on notoriety, ne and his kind die for want of it." o One Survivor Rescued From Mina Miami. Fla. Several men were still buried at the Cactus mine, ten miles west of here, late Saturday as a re. suit of a cavein at the mine shortly after Friday midnight. One mu in, who was taken from the workings unconscious early Saturday is in a critical condition at the co.inty hospital. lie was the only man removed from the workings. He said he believed many of bis fellow workmen wor caught in the shifting-- , ground that fell on I them. J Trovo. Ulmo Campbell of the junior high school was the successful en. trant in the eean-uposter contest and received a prize of $10. p Logan. A white doer is reported ns having been seen by Deputy Warden Theodore Seeholser on the flat just below the Logan fish liatchery. The home of G. W, Springville. Mendenhall narrowly escaped destruction by fire. It is thought that some burning debris from the kitches flue started the blaze. |