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Show THE SAUNA SUN, SAUNA, UTAH Stories of fabulous profits from small investments are being circulated when the buyers of last year who paid $5 for 1,000,000 marks in German war bonds cashed in at the prevailing quotations of $1750, a rise of $150 in the past week. Prussian war loans worth $400 per 1,000,000 A RESUME OF THE WEEKS marks three months ago, brought ten DOINGS IN THIS AND OTHER times the original sum and other COUNTRIES German securities rose in proportion. The rise in general was ascribed to Important Evanta of the Last Seven the recent favorable report on the Dawes plan for rehabilitating GerDaya Reported by Wire and Pre. many. pared for the Benefit of the Forty-on- e Buay Reader miners, charged with rioting as a result of a raid recently on the Kali-InlCoal mine near WESTERN Cambria, entered pleas of not guilty The Rev. Chalfant Drevea of Pitts-kur- before Judge H. E. McLarty, justice of the peace at Ilberton, 6kla., waivPa., who killed by a fall into ed preliminary hearings and were n abandoned mine shaft bound over for appearance in dis Bear Howbert, Colo., Albert Davidson trict court for trial 1. November f Howbert, who was act.iipanying Their bonds were set at $100(), which the minister, was overcome by gas each man furnished. at the bottom of the shaft and was The First church, located rescued by Henry Rogers of Howbert, in the center Baptist of the city, of Niagara a third member of the party. David- Falls, N. Y., was bombed. The inson's condition is serious. terior of the structure was wrecked. Windows in the church and in the Y. An investigation of the relations W. C. A. across the street af Ann Luther, actress and Jack F. were blownbuilding out. White, wealthy mining man, which Florence McKinney, will extend from New York to Los sweetheart of Emil Zupke, confessed Angeles, with a view to seeking basris murderer of Cora May Raber, has Mann act proceedings against the confessed that Bhe witnessed the killpair, was launched according to an of her rival for Zupkes affecannouncement by Lecien C. Wheeler, ing tions and helped hide the body, acagent at Los Angeles of the department of justice, and United States cording to Sheriff George Bridgman of Benton Harbor, Mich. Zupko and Attorney Joe Burke. the girl occupied adjoining cells in Final decision on the upset price to the county jail. be fixed by the United States district The United States will enter negocourt for the sale of the Denver and tiations and discussions looking to the Rio Grande Westem railroad at an cancellation or reduction of the auction sale, will not be made until indebtedness of foreign govafter September 1 at the earliest, ernments to this country, the white according to an announcement by the house officially have stated. court at Denver. How long after A telegram from Henry Ford askSeptember 1 it will be before the upset will be fixed will be determined ing that his name be withdrawn from only by the turn of events in dispos- the list of candidates for the Repubing of a petition filed last week by lican nomination for United States Harold Palmer of New York, in senator in the Michigan primary was which he sought to intervene in the received at Lansing, Mich., by Secrebearing to determine the upset price. tary of State Charles Deland. Secretary of War Weeks has anA. C. Tipple, only survivor of the nounced that on retirement of Generwhich saw the group slaying of Wild Bill Hicock by Jack McCall al Pershing, September 13, next, Maat Deadwood, S. D., in 1873, and a jor General John L. Hines, now dep uty chief of staff, would be appoint pioneer, is dead. cd chief of staff by the president. Andrew S. Anderson, Democratic FOREIGN nominee for governor of South DaContinued kota, was gored to death at his farm activity of the rebels in the zone of Morroco is reSpanish miles Bears of south thirty ford, S. D. ported in an official communique just Gay county. issued. The rebels in the western Details of the purpose of a seven zone attacked a supply column in million dollar suit to be filed this the Buharra sector, but were repulsmonth by the government against the ed with losses. One soldier Spanish Skinner & Eddy corporation, a war- wras killed ar.d four wounded. time shipbuilding firm of Seattle, for The execution of Frau Meria Ilan-ik- a adjustment of claims and counterfor the murder of her husband, claims involving two hundred million dollars of shipbuilding transactions, which was recently delayed until she were given out by Oliver B. M. qave birth to a child, will take place Brown, special assistant appointed by .oon, the authorities announced. The United States Attorney General Har- lay after the child was born 20,000 lan F. Stone.. Czech crowns arrived at the prison where Frau Ilanika is confined with September 24 has been designated instructions that the money should as the date for the big celebration at he turned over to the infant, a girl Burns, Oregon, to mark the opening when she reached the age of 18. of the railroad in this terirtory. Inflamed with jealosy because each Documents in the Oregon compul--sor- held herself first in the affections of school attendance test cases Giovanni Manzi, & two wowere forwarded to Washington last men fought a duel with knives which week. The law, which was declared ended when Concetta Palmira disunconstitutional by three federal armed her opponent, Mpria Meschino, Judges at Portland, Ore., thus goes and stabbed Tier to death, at Naples, to the United States supreme court Italy. The victorious duelist was arfor final decision. The case may rested, charged with homicide. he argued this fall, Ensign Evaristo Velo, Argentine H. J. Mallen, Los Angeles business naval aviator, is sailing for New man and sportsman caught a 528 York, on his way to Tokio, where he round sword fish off Santa Catalina will join the Argentine world flier, island. It is said to be the largest Major Pedro Zanni, on the latters of its kind ever caught with a rod arrival, and act as navigation officer and line. The sword fish was twelve when Zanni c attempts his feet, six inches long and four feet flight. ten inches in girth. His sword was 48 inches long. Ten Egyptian soldiers were killed The fish knocked in the side of the boat and disabled and nine wounded in a collision with British troops at Atbnra the propeller in his final plucge. following disturbances In which Egyptian GENERAL British with troops attacked the bricks at their barracks, s"ys an Ex. Clem L. Shaver, Democratic naTelegraph dispatch from tional committee chairman has ar- iditmve rived at Chicago to establish a west- Cairo. ern headquarters for the Democratic An ubovilve attempt was made to nipaign and discuss .vikh western bring about ft radical communist re. .eaders the plans for a western volt at Libro.i, Portugal. A few bombs speaking schedule for Jt,hn W. Davis, were thrown but. they caused no dam-ag- e the partys presidential nominee. and several persons were arrestDr. Louis Arensborg of Unior.town, ed. The place and military now are Pa., was elected coirniander-in-cliie- f in control of the city and conditions of the Grand Army of the RcpubBc are normal. by the encampment juxl closed in The French academy has finished Boston. the first volume of its revised die. John W. Davis opened his cam- thu.ary of the French language. The It paign for the presidency of the Uni- volume contains letters A to 11. ted States in a vertiable torrert of took forty.siv years to comp'ete, rain a rain that soaked the thous- having been begun in 1S78. Suppos. ands of persons who hd journeyed ing tiie learned body requires an from many cities to witness the for- equal amount of time to ponder over mal ceremonies to notify candi- the accented! letters, remaining date of his selection as the standard ninety. six years, or very nearly n bearer of the Democratic party, at century will elapse before the great work is finally completed. Clarksburg, W. Va. TELEGRAPHIC TALES FOR BUST READERS a g, gas-fille- d trans-Faci-fi- is Americas veterans braved a driving rain in Boston to march once more to the sound of fife and drum. The Grand army of the Republic drew its thinning ranks- together for one more parade perhaps its last here. Those who answered the cal! to arms in 1861 as lads, fired with enthusiasm to do their part in saving the Union, walked as bravely today, some of them almost tottering others still erect ir their old age, over a rr.ile of wet and slippery pave white-haire- d - Baent A exploded in nitroglycerin dump tiie Uocca Anfo fortress at Brosala, Italy, d'dng great damage. Tiie number of casualties is not known hut two bodies have been recovered. Truf. fie nti neighboring roads wag blocked by debris. Bernice and Fanning, aged 7 and 8 years, were strangled to death on n improvised gallows by their mother. Mrs. George Fanning, 28, who then cut her throat In an attempt to end her life on a farm nine miles south of Lindsay, Ont iiEPlLIlEYE MOSTLY TRUE PURR Ell OH Hines to Be Chief of General. Staff MaJ. Gen. John L. Hines, deputy chief of stall (portrait herewith), will succeed Gen. John J. Pershing as chief of staff of the United States army upon the latters retirement this fall. The War department general staff Is organized under the set of 1920. The chief of staff Is the Immediate adviser of the secretary of war on all matters relating to the military establishment and Is charged by him with the planning, development and execution of He directs the the army program. staff of the by general preparations the plans for organizing, equipping, training and using the military forces for national defense, including those for the mobilization of the material resources of the nation. John Leonard Hines was born In West Virginia In 1SGS and was graduated from the United States Military academy in 1891. He saw service in the Spunish-Americn- n war, in the He arBhilippines at various times and in tiie Mexican punitive expedition. rived in France In June of 1917 as assistant adjutant general, A. E. F. He wus successively colonel Sixteenth infantry; commander First brigade, infantry, First division ; commander Third Army corps and commander Fourth, Fifth and Second divisons. In 1921 he was made commander of the Eighth Corps area. He was awarded I). S. M. In 1919 for services as regimental, brigade, division and corps commander and D. S. C. for service In Solssons drive." He lias various decorations from the French, British, Belgian und Italian governments. Van Sweringens Big Railroad Operators said the other day: Tiie Van Swerlngen railroad merger Is next door to an accomplished fact. It is, in fact, accomplished. What remains to he done Is detail. Four systems. Nickel Plate, Chesapeake & Ohio, Including the Hocking Valley; Erie A Pere Marquette. operating over 11, OtX) miles of line and with total balance sheet footings of upwards of $1,000, (XX), (XX) and $1,500, OtX), 000, will, within a few weeks, be brought under a unified control with Cleveland headquarters. Put into the picture also Clevelands new Union station and terminal, for O. P. Van Swerlngen saysb expects to see the steel going up on the central section of its depot on the public square within a few weeks. There are two Van Sweringen brothers, Orris P. (portrait herewith) and Mantis J. Orris is forty-siand Mantis forty-fouThey were born in Wooster, Ohio. The first Vun Sweringen railroad purchase The Cleveland was the Nickel Mrs. Seton Back From India Tigerlesr Seton of trip to India which had many interesting features. She was the guest of Lord and Lady Reading nnd of 11 different malinrn-iahs- . She interviewed Ghandi twice. She went on 11 separate organized tiger hunts In central and southern India and didn't get a single shot at i tiger. She was the guest of the exiled emperor and empress of China. She got inside the Zenanas and brought back material for a book on women in India. She founded womens organizations and gave lectures which were translated into four languages. She hud various adventures with dangerous wild animals and had several narrow escapes. Mrs. Seton Is equally ns famous s as her husband. By the way, the Canadino are longer apparently ans but Americans. Incidentally, their Seton" recalls, a romance. name, When the head of the Seton family, several generations ago, fled to England from Scotland, he assumed the name of Thompson. Ernest Seton Thompson Now lie has was the name used by the naturalist in his early publications. resumed his ancestral name. Thompson New York is back from a Se-ton- mtmiMi im'HtmHimwiimHfmtMh Watson and Couzens Agree to Disagree K. Watson (Ilep.) (portrait herewith), chairman of the senate committee to investiof Indiana gate t lie Income tax unit and the prohibition unit of the internal revenue bureau, lias resigned from the chairmanship and intends to take no part in the inquiry. Senator Janies Couzens (Rep.) of Michigan, has been elected elmirman In his place. The other members of tiie committee, Senator William H. King (Iem.) of Utah and Senator A. A. Jones (Item.) of New Mexico, have decided to go ahead with tiie investigation. September 2 has been fixed as the date of the of open hearings in Washing ton The liarcup dates buck to the last session of congress when the committee, then investigating tiie Internal revenue department, employed Francis Honey of California as prosecutor and announced its plans of investigating the income tax und prohibition units and Secretary them Wutvon. in the senate denounced the ulan. Franco-Bel-giu- m g Abandons Flight Prince Rupert, B. C. Major Stuart MacLaren, British aviator who failed in an attempt to fly around the world, has announced that he probably would not make another attempt. He asserted that such a venture to be a success: must be backed by greater resources than private firms can provide. He has no excuse to offer for his failure, beyond general misfortunes and bad weather conditions. here? The difference between blessing and cursing is In the arrangement of the words Chester C. Conner In the Chicago American. SOME GIFT HORSES The press agent gives his landlady a pass for Youre Another, a fare comedy. The book reviewer gives his best girl the novel which he has characterized as "pabulum for ninnies. Houston Texas Has Big Fire Houston, Tex. Fire which swept a downtown business block here caused damage estimated at $200,000. The Settegast building, an eight-stor- y structure, was burned to the ground. The Bering Hardware companys loss alone was $100,000. Their entire stock was wiped out. One spectator was injured when he slipped on the wet pavement. The shopkeeper brings home to his wife the cape which has been lying about for three years. Mr. Burnside passes along to hla bookkeeper, Mr. Tuttle, the cigars Mrs. Burnside bought for him last Christmas. Baby throws the cat a chicken bone further nourishment Tassy appears strangely ungrateful. on which she can find no Ford Denies Report Detroit, Mich. Denial that Henry Ford, automobile manufacturer, inMrs. Suburban gives her neighbor tended to use gasoline engine vessels some of the mushrooms which she to carry raw material on the Missisin her garden. Mrs. Subsippi river in connection with a Ford finds growing Is not certain about them. urban quite plant under construction at St. Paul, was made at the Ford offices here. READ AND REFLECT Reports from Dubuque, la., that such p.ans were under way were characterized as unfounded. Despair and confidence both banish Woman Dies at 122 Years Albuquerque, N. M. Mrs. Carmel-itIarreras. oldest woman in Albuquerque and possibly in the state died here aged 122 years. She was born in Socorro, M., in 1S02 and lived there until ten years ago, when she moved to Alnuquorque. a !. Mellon's act1 'IPes l A fascinating sports costume is of white silk plaited all over. It has sleeveless coat of rose flannel, also plaited, and u chic touch is given by a little white pocket in tiie coat, plaited, too. hip-lengt-h, Stockings for Bride The bride's stockings are permitted to sparkle as she walks up the aisle. Of fine white silk, they have clocks in flower pattern, each flower bright wltfl crystal dewdr Words will never be wanting if yon August 18 saw the first deal with a subject. move eestabIishment of toward Happy a subject when the prince Is peace in Europe under terms of the by justice, not bis passionate guided of when London, pact will. Offen-burnow troops occupying and Appenweir, towns of BadBeware of the man whose promises en, start moving out. are lighter than the breath that utters The towns have been occupied them. since February 4, 1923, when the He who knows not the way to the Germans international suppressed trains running between Paris, War- sea should make the river his comsaw and Prague. The international panion. trains service was restored some It Is foolish pride which causes s time ago. man to get wet rather than ride In the Official orders for the withdrawal carriage of an inferior. of the French and Belgium troops were given only a few hours after It is always the adventurers who the interallied conferees in London accomplish great things and not the had signed the protocois of the Lonmonarchs of great empires. don pact. The orders call for evacuation of the troops. CHESTERS CHUCKLES Premier Herrit, Socialist leader and Chief French negotiator at the Weather and people are sometimes London conference on application of balmy. the Dawes report, will return to Paris amidst the spontaneous plauThere must be a twelve-millimit dits of his faction the Socialists. on coal. Already the radical group has planned a big celebration The Artists Quarter is frequently at the Saint Lazare station, while the city of his last. a municipal Dieppe is preparing The home of a politician Is in a welcome. The French people apparently have quandary. decided td accept the London t An open mouth is not the sign of an with the Dawes plan for new mind. open relations toward The Germany. are not much people stirred over the The aviator often wishes he were evacuation of Appenweir and Offen-burdown and ouL but are more anxious to know what the London pact will do toThe tax collector reminds us of ward living questions. Uncle and other relations. In the proposed evacuation of the Ruhr, the people are asking whether The easiest way to get people to they will have cheaper or more ex- write you Is to fail to pay your bills. pensive coal this winter. Some people never think of working It is confirmed now that the opovertime. The boss does that. is to Herposition attack preparing riot in that they claim through his When mother gets a new gown she acceptance of the pact of London he a perfect fit. So does dad. gets cancellation of agreed the upon treaty of Versailles. Why do people go south for the winter when there is plenty of It right McLaren Paris, The noblest motive Is the public good. Salt Lake City Firms To uiure prompt lerriec and quick return to these advertisement mention the norao ol this paper. BUSINESS COLLEGES The latest idea in glass bracelets is to wear perhaps a dozen of these clear, slender ornaments, which graduate in color from pale yellow to deep green, from crimson to faint pink or from emerald to apple. suh-due- d you may fear. Attractive Costume Plaids More Subdued If you gaze too long at the mooa fall Into the gutter. , Yankee Scouts Win Laurels Tin American Boy Copenhagen, Scouts were awarded tiie highest number of points for tlicir participation in tiie international scout jamboree, which have just en ed here, thus winn'ng the prise eup offered by King Christian. Tiie Americans scor172 for the ed 1SI points agair.st British scouts, took second place. Colors in Bracelets Plaids still remain in favor, although the colors are a bit more than in tiie spring. The plaid skirt of soft silk Is becoming popular lor sports wear. If you sail with a bad wind, yov need to understand tacking. g, In 1916, Senator James to peri-men- x Mrs. Ernest never unit Victor and vanquished in a hearty agreement. r; Planned ancient Injury e News-Leade- r r. Plate Soldiers Begin Leave Offtinburg and Appen-weiHerriot Ovation A successful ruler must have many eyes and many ears. By bearing with an you invite a new one. TOWNS THAT HAVE BEEN OCCUPIED SINCE FEBRUARY 1923 SEE TROOPS MOVE ON France-Be'giu- Man projects al lhls life and dies without realizing. L. D. S. BUSINESS COLLEGE. School of Efficiency. AH commercial branch. Catalog free. 60 N. Main St., Salt Lake City. BOOKS AND SHORT STORIES book you wantby mail, C. O. I) DvUIw Any Book Co. 44 Kant So. Temple pftOVC SONGS A SHEET CAVfC MUSIC new and old. AH kinds. Sheet music by iimii. COD. Bcesh y Music Co. 57 S Main FRUIT BOXES A VEGETABLE CRATES Lincoln Honors Bryan Neb. Governor Charles Lincoln, PEACH CRATES & APPLE B XES .V. Bryan Monday received the highSalt Lnke Box & Lumber Co. 61 So. 5th West , est honor of his political career in RADIO DEALERS the city where he spent more than I I JC Write for amnlc ropy of the '.elf of his life the formal notifiHI ivnLLVs new mafraruic. the Carrier cation of his nomination for the vice Wave1 IiitJ Axents Wanted. 71 W. Br ndwny. 'residency by the Democratic party. Lin.oln was dressed in gala attire or the occasion, banners, flags, and Say it With Flowers Hundreds hunting being displayed. Fresh Cut Flowers at All Times of delegates and visitors from nearby cities and towns made their here Hobdays Rower Shop y auto. Salt Keith F.niporium Bldg. T,i; y |