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Show THE SAUNA SUN. SAUNA. UTAH Another Chinese revolt against for elgn domination similar to the Boxer rising of twenty-fivyears ago lsva possible outcome of the present demonstrtions, but not immediately probable, II. G. W. Wood-heaan Englishman, editor of the Peking and Tientsin Times and the WEEKS China Year Book, said on his arrival A RESUME OF THE . DOINCS IN THIS AND OTHER in New York. COUNTRIES Closeted In- the .shadowy death cell In the county jail at Chicago, a chain.-- , Important Events of the 'Last Seven .her h.e JiftS occupied thrqogh three periods of terror of death, Russell T. Days Reported by "Wire and Pre-- l ScoFt, convicted slayer "of. Joseph. pared for the Benefit of" 'the Mourer, Is daily an"d for long periods . . Busy Reader ' . . testtj by' psychiartrists. undergoing , The defense hopes to convince a Jury WESTERN EPIOME .. that Scott has become tesance since After nearly three days had. been sentence of death .vufi passed upon n- consumed selecting a jury, nine him and escape tfie rope via the same men and three women were impanel-o- rouje taken by Gene Geary, a notorear .evidence ious killer. , at Los Angeles the alleged plotting- of concerning Mayor R'olph of San Francisco .conthree men to kidnap Mary . Pickford ferred witti President Palmer of Ihe creen (Star,. and hold .her-fo- r $200,000 Fleet corporation on the purchase of line and ransom. Court adjourned until the the the of. . both .te8tilnohy'i'& started, a which are now operated out Of west . Burled for eighteen flays berteath coasi ports for the shipping heal'd by tons of debris, the body of Chrissie Swayne & Hoyt. .No dectsUm was . . Ricker, 7, daughter of Mr. Vnd Mrs.. reached. of Tlont., Morrill Ricker wgs News of the- death .of .Willfnm Jen-.- , Neihart, recovered from the accumulation of nifigs Bryan Tenn., came muck .that flootled thq, ravine below tq Washington.wlth. - stunning suddenthe Silver Dyke mine on July 10tJv ness and at a time- when his name when the' dam broke after being was blazing in headlines, much as it. did't the height of his political caweakened by earthquake-shock- s. reer twenty years ago! His efforts at .Mrs. May Putnaig Christ, 58. South Dayton, where he had fought with .Dakota suffrage worker," in 1912 a grefit. spirit over the question pf .evodelegate to the Democratic national lution, had given fri.ends here, the imconvention is dead at the home of pression that he was in vigorous health, and it had been freely predicther daughter at Pasadena! Calif:- ed that his voice tould ring oujwhen Turgatee, Oregon anti .vicinity were (he next congress assembled, in .a .covered with a sheet of water a foot movement to throw into senate and deep, which swept over the lowland, house debate the cause for which he washing out the tracks of the Oregon-- , had fought in Tennessee. Washington Railroad and Navigation The new $G0, 000,000 Chicago 'U if ion. tompany to thfe aggregate of about covering-thirtfive acres and The a and half station, milesp greatest $ne used by foul railroads has been fordamage was done at Nelson and berm re- mally opened six weeks after some of No loss of Its facilities began to function. Rankported; . ing with the Grand. Central syid PennCali- William D. Brown, sylvania stations in New York, as the fornia pioneer and said to be the eld- .largest railway depots in the country! est Shrlner In the . world, died .at the station .lias accommodations for Berkely, Calif. He was born In Char- 300 trains daily, for 50.000 passengers and would have aifd 400 tons of baggage. Va lottesville, , reached his. one hundredth birthday Federal legislation abolishing .all on December. 4 of this y.ear. radio broadcasting oT advertising will Applicants for licenses to drive au- be sought at the next session of contomobiles iir California must subjnit gress, Sol Bloom of New York an-- ' evidence of their mental and. physical nounced prior to sailing for a trip to fitness under the - terms of the law England and France. passed by the" last legislature which FOREIGN became .effective July 24th.' The new Addison law-alsBancroft, American Edgar automobile forbids the use of died at Karui-zawto ambassador Japan, a meun as of determin"speed traps was takAmbassador Bancroft ing the rate at which a machine. is en a ill at ijioun-tai- n popular Karuizawa, used for The many traveling. trap, In resort where central Japan, years, was a method of timing the a machine, between two ar-- , he was spending the summer, about speed bitrary points on the state highway. three weeks ago. At first it - was thought he. was suffering from- indiGENERAL gestion, but his trouble later was. dias a small duodenal ulcer.. agnosed An Important corps In New Yorks The death Is announced of thenot-.e- d great white collar working army raised the standard of revolt. The munipainter Leon Augustin Lliermitte, cipal engineers, 3500 strong and rep- .one of France's foremost landscape resenting the largest single aggrega- artists, and a member of the institute. tion of their profession in Prediction that the churches of the outside of military establishments, world, including the church of Rome, completed an organization which has would work in interdenom-inatioeveiiutally for its object improvement of a salary union with one another, was and workng conditions comparable made by Bishop William T. Mannljig with the dignity, training and responof the Episcopal diocese? of New-Yorsibility .of the position. . before he left Montreal on his vacaMrs. Gutnvere Sinclair Gould, the tion. mystery woman who worsook a chor-- . .A Reuters Canton-dispatc- h says a us position on Broadway to live with Russian. General Borodin,-has- . been the late George J. Gould for ten- years appointed adviser to the Canton govprior to the death of his wife, aston- ernment, succeeding Robert. S. Norished her friends by becoming the man, an 'American. (Mr. Norman la bride of George St. John Broderick, from Oaklund,. Calif., ahd. was legal Viscount Dunsford, qt New York. He adviser' to the late Dr. Sun Yat Sen, Is the oldest son and heir of . head of the Canton government.) : of" Middleton. fiscal- - year 1926. for The the budget t. Tax reduction to the amount of at as submitted to the legislature, at least $500,000,000, with exemption of Manila, places thfe- governments at $34,500,000, while the Inall ta'xes on incomes of 5000 or less come is estimated at $35,0(10,000, leadand elimination of the miscellaneous and Inheritance taxes, was urged at ing a surplus of approximately half a Washington by Senator. Copeland; million. The largest single Item of Democrat, New York. He advopated expense Is for education, amounting reduction in surtaxes to 10 per cent. to approximately .$9,000,000. Sixteen persons were injured, none The second phase of the evaeuatlon of the Ruhr, which lias been occupied "Fifteen hundred prohibition agents by- - allied troops since January 11, will lose their jobs not later than Oc- 1923, began, with the departure .of -in tober 15, hi the biggest shake-utrodps garrisoned at Essen. Complete the enforcement "service-smc- e evacuation otJhe.ftuhr is to be con;, of the Volstead act. A vast eluded by July 31,. wheit hr will state life definitely hawded back to the Germajor.iy f the forty-eigh- t will, those to man authorities In accordance with go. NoThorfe than 900 wIUTie' appoint- the London agreement. ed to the new force with which It is Fifteen" persons w;ere killed and hoped to make, the nation completely hundreds reported irijured when the dry. packed Melbourne, Australia, veran'da Hundreds were and a of a moving picture theatre collapsed.-Thspectators were watching a- pawhole north- - section of Chicago- was . oh Bourke street. shaken- when a gasdline barge of the rade Texas company,, on which . were The World Federation, of Educagallons, exploded, with a terrific tional Associations took Initial, .steps and terrifying blast and a roar of at Edenburgh, Scotland to put into flames which leaped 400 feet into the operation the organization's plan for air. The barge, known as the Re- future..s:GEld peace and understanding liable, was moored at the time in the by adopting a series of . resolutions north branch of the river just off the recommending courses of study that oil eonipan.v8 north side plant and will present to students a full constorage property. ception of internationalism. TELEGRAPHIC TALES X5fie e T31E)PfSJ3IElElJ3SSifiSlE'SfEffiSEEilSSlSSEW 1 anti-foreig- n AMERICAN . MaryGrahamBomier sr nruuHPf jncvr d tn-tr- Wea-therb- We-has, MR. AND .MRS. GIRAFFE "We are known as the Nubian or giraffe's," said Mr. G1- -, raffe. Oh, very well, said Mrs. Giraffe, it really doesnt matter to me." It. doesn't matter to me, said Mr. I., was only telling you a. Giraffe, ; fact. . Thank you, thank you kindly, said . "Mrs. Giraffe. , , . "Youre welcome, youre - very wel. said. Mr. Giraffe.come, N'W, as you can readily guess, from this conversation, the gl ruffes-ar- e very . 8tupld. , In fact, many people and keepers think the are more stupid than any other animals. How tall. are you?" asked' Mrs. Giraffe. . Tin between fourteen and fifteen Yeet in height, said Mr. Giraffe. . ' You are a coupfe of Inches shorter. Bui were both growing all the time.1 Seems Yo me, said Mrs. Giraffe, y thrt silly way to tell a, . creatures height by feet. J 'always get so confused when .the keeper tells people how many feet I . am . "1 look down at my feet tef see if I have twelve by mistake and then remember lie. is talking about height." Never nilpd, said Mr. Giraffe,, though we are so big. we are very quick hboiit getting down and getting up. We always keep our front feet and our right hind foot under us, but ,our hind .left foot we leave free so that we can get up In no time at all: "yere clever In that way, said Mrs. Giraffe. continued, suppose,1 Mr. Giraffe "that although .we are- stupid we have a great deal to be thankful for. We are TTTOkt Interesting looking. adore us! . .Children absolutely wetoo funny for think are They ,. words, with our great long necks. Terhaps We haven't many brains, said Mrs. Giraffe, because all the rftom was taken up by our necks. Nonsense, said Mr. Giraffe, brains" dont come In necks. I didnt say .they came In thi necks, said Mrs. Giraffe. I remarked that so much-rooiwas given to us for our necks that they three-horne- d - its-a'ver- 'I IS (Copy for This Department Supplied by the American Legion K'ewa Service. ) the-Ear- l - p .the-Rrr- e pate-stricke- 90,-00- 0 .seriously, when the New England Elk special, running as second section of Santa Fe train No: 10 was derailed by a washout seventeen miles east of Gallup, N. M. Less than four hours before he was to be executed Russell Scott was saved from the gallows for the second time within a week when Judge Joseph B. David convened a special session of court at Chicago and issued s writ r,f habeas corpus staying the execution until time had been given t- '.Tuire into the condemned mans sanity. France is faced with the possibility of a general ;bank Btrike by the pnd of next week. Taking advantage of the increased business caused by new 4 per cent guaranteed loan, the of one of the largest Paris bajiks have gone on strike because the management refused to grant Increases In pay, and .the employees of other banks have called meetings to decide whether to join the movement. Bank employees In Marseilles are already on strike and the movement shows signs of gaining in Alvignon. Toulon and other cities. Price. James J. Powell, 47, a brfage .construction expert, was killed by accident when his wife, Alberta, 36, tfardw-knife nth'm across, fhe dinner table. The knife struck the cartilage ahovfe his heart and entered the riglit ventritle killing .he man in stantaneously. Apparently Mr. and Mrs. Powell had been having a'bit of a family tiff. He reached out . and slapped her in the face. As he leaned back, her hand grasped the "nearest object,-- . "the knife, and she threw jt. The doctors said that it was only one chance in a hundred that the blow, could halve brought death-athe knife was: a dull one used for cutting flow- ers, and it was not thrown .with giuch a Idea 'Of 'War Between United States And His Country Is Dismissed As LEADS IN MAKING GOOD AMERICANS . Most Friendly FTfclibfl Exists. .Absui'd; . Although Frank Clay Cross, new director qf the national Anierlcanlsifl commission of the Ajnerican Legion, . . ' '' Washington. "Abolition of the battleship and restrittjon of navies on a bi&is of total tonnage was advocated here by Count Michimasa Soyeshima a Japanese statesman, who is visiting Ambassador Tsuneo Matsudara. . Count Soyeshima- would put Ihe maximum tonnage of any natioq at 300,000, and allow the construction 'only of vessels of not more than tons displacement. . His idea coincides with the sugges-- ' tion of British naval authorities favoring the elimination of the. capital, ship, but he clashes with the British view in proposing that, any nation be allowed to construct the maximum tonnage if it wishes to do so. Count Soyeshima does not .believe ratio of the Washingthat the ton arms cpnference can be preserved indefinitely in .the smaller craft. Every nation, he holds, has the fight to build up to the .maximum tonnage in lighter craft for- national defense. Rut the real solution lies in mental disarmament rather than physical disarmament, Count Soyeshima said. So long as the nations . think, and talk of war, limitation of armament, although desirable, is not everything. When the nations think and talk 'of peace, then armaments, will reduce ' themselves. Talk of war between the United States and Japan, according to Count Soyeshima, is absurd. Both have the same aim the maihtenance of peace and the development of the Far East, he said. Russian aspirations in the Far East he asserted, are much.more likely to bring "about a conflict, but here, too, 'he expressed the view that Russia and Japan would be able to reconcile their purposes. While in Washington, Count Soyeshima conferred with Secretary of State Kellogg. The Japanese statesman will leave within the next 'few days for New York to sail for England, where, his son is attending Oxford university. fias spent much of his life, as he says, above, the clouds, far up the sides of Colorado mountains Just t the timber line, he measures up to a family. tradition, of grasping. the .facts of life as fhey are nnil fighting to mold them Into gdffletlilng better. . It Is the pioneer spirit, a spirit that goes out into the wilderness and"hews from dens.e forests homes, .and cltle's and states, a spirit that conquers pltfins and mountains and. the. physical side subdued,., moves on to wrestle rolglKily with the finer,' the. spiritual things. Frank Crosss, family has been a family of fighting pioneers for genera' tlon.s, Hlways on the frontier of civilization. Ills forebears lea befprethe Revolution. Ilis greatgrandfather was ,ar pioneer settler in Marlon county, Indians, where national Headquarters of the Legion Is located.. The'' family, trekked across c.ountry with the co'vesed wagon. From Indiana they moved into Iowa when that state was opening up. TIren to IuBsas nmfto Colorado, while the buffalo were stitl on the'pinins and Indian In combands roamed the country. he to Indianapolls, says,Iain the ing first of the'tribe to back track and hit the "trail for the . East. lie had laid a precedent In some soyt for that,-- when h& hit the trail' for overseas and the battlefields of France when therq vyas work that needed much .to be. done over there. Ancestors of his had fought in every one of the nations wahs. His entire family his father, two bothers and himself , volunteered In T7. A younger brother, Charles, lost his life in France. frank Cross put in T3 months In France. He was on 'detached service Calais, look'with the British north ing after American troops pho came - 10,-00- 0 ... eame-to.Ame- - s Torce.. ' . . Balt Lake City. . . T. M. Fitspatrick, after. seven yoaik'of faithful eervioe-a- t the University pf Utah signed the contract which vill carry; him to the public schools' of . Oakland, Calif.', he make his home at least for the time. being. Tommy, to? as such he is known ' throughout the state will direct in the physical 'education department of an Oakland high school ahd' will ' coach athjetics as well.The particular school to whicii he will be assigned hps not'bden ah .nounced, afid probably will not. be unr til his arrival in Oakland, some time ' ; next month. wh.ere - Salt An assessed xalud-tjoof something like about $50,000,000 more Lkq City. for'the sta'te n or than last year, is indicated' at present; members' of the state board of equalization told Governor George H. Dern. With such an assessed valuation the state general fund tax rate will be at the constitutional limit of 2.4 mills;. and that for state high' school at tlje similar limit of. .2 of a mill. The limit for district school purposes Is $25 peh capita of school population. It is thought the rate of last year, 4.7 mills, will be sufficient for this pur 670,000,000,' pose. . . Logan. The' board of directors. of the Logan chamber of commerce has accepted' thq report of their special Committee named to investigate the problem of the municipal power plant. .The committees report recommended that the plant be sold, stating, in substance, that it was a liability to the city nd that it costs the taxpayers about ,6 mills to meet .maintenance-'charges- . . The chamber of commerce directors approved the report by a vote of 16 to 6. Ogden. The livestock, sugar, canning and grain industries of Weber Noted Musician Called will be featured extensively in Salt Lake City. John J. McClellan, county a booklet to bd distribnaorganist' at the Tabernacle and uted. by the Ogden Chamber of Comabilifor his 'famous musical tionally merce, Secretary JesSe S.. Richards ties, died at his- home on August 2nd. "Professor McClellan had been in ill announced. Vernal. E. A. Manker,. Vernal real health for the last twenty montHs. During a concert tour nearly two estate dealer has on display in his ofbranch taken-froyears ago oil the Pacific coast he was fice an a tree in the orchard of William stricken at San Francisco and was forced to cancel all engagements and Neal of Maeser ward, which has es-- ' rest. His last collapse ea me last" tablished a rec.ord. 'The branch i and carried ninety; week. Hopes for his recoverey were six feet in nine of which fell off four at apples, time. that practically given up an while being taken to Vernai.' The Professor McClellan, international reputation as a musici- apples, while not ripe, are all perfectan, was born in Payson on April 20, ly formed and a close examination to discover a single blemish In his 1874, the son of John Jasper. childhood he gave evidence of his among .the. entire number. The tree love for music and in his earlier years from. which the branch was taken is he was largely When he twelve years old. .A California fruit was 17 years of age .he entered the grower who visited the orchard with school of music of the University of Mr. Manker, stated That when fully, the 'number ,of apples Michigan at Ann Arbor, and there developed studied under such masters as Al- grown on this one branch' woqld fill . . bert W. Platte, piano and theory, and a standard size apple box. Alberto Jonas, piano. Completing his Salt. Lake City. Premium lists courses at Michigan te went to Ber- the 1925 fair, October 1 to 7, now are. lin in 1899 and there studied the being distributed. Jt is officially and the piano and theory under nounced in the booklet by Governor Francis Xaviar Scharwenka and Er-- . Dern, the fair association ' believes nest Jedliczka. Lhis, the exhibition, will from all angles be ihe finest .in the French Deny Rumor history of the organization. The to 'minister French Peking. Bingham. Weakened, through parChina, in a statement to the press, tial razing the Copper Field hotel colsaid the attitude of his government lapsed here. Louis Ozanson, driving in protecting foreigners in China Is a Studebaker touring car was slightly unchanged.. The minister denies the injured by the flying debris of the .rumor that the French are not act- -' falling structure and Sofia Tombar-gouj- , ing in collaboration with the other 4, who was driving with him,, powers. As a refutation of these re- alsp suffered cuts and.d scalp wound. ports he cites the action . f -- the Those In the building when it colFrench troops In quelling the recent lapsed escaped . with bruises' and out breaks in Chinking slight shocks! . e - apple-bearin- "the-worl- k TQURIN'Cr'COUNTRY ' ' o-- n l9l9IS3SSi039BISiySi'5,fPIi;llr::n;,n3fi3rP!r1liyB.!i af5e. in disfavor battleships WITH VISITING COUNT WHO Wtjrn cotrKK-rf- ... - 1 News Notes From All Parts of UTAH 5.rank Clay Cross. across the cliannel froiq England. Then was sint down to Tours with the he Interesting Looking. French, wher.e he handled . all ship.couldnt bother about attending to the ments out of thqt city. He was' dis. in July, 1919. brains in our heads. charged in . They became weary jvhen they .lie .became assistant chemist with an oil .coinpaify for about a year. In reached the toil." the'interval he married Miss Helen M. Mr. Giraffe. Idea, grinned .Silly . But no matter. There jire things Fry, a former schoo.lmate at the Uniof Denver. She was of a famjvengree on. We both llke.barley, hay, versity of teachers and Cross thoughts ily vegetables and bran. to that profession. He went In turned And though, were the most stupid more for schooling economies, socie of animals the ostrich and camel and political seierme--an- d ology . almost asstupid. became' superintendent of a. consolU .IUit Im jtlad we're different. We dated school. In 1923 he became bead have .necks unlike other creatures, of the department of economics at the legs unlike and brains quite different. Colorado School of Mines. . . And now, Ijn going to make bp a He also became a lecturer at the zoolet for my neighbor giraffe. . That Denver oprorf unity school.' A what? asked Mrs. Giraffe. was h turning point. for him, the thing A poem," said Mr. Giraffe, but as which led directly to his appointment Im doing it in the too I shall call It as director of the Americanism- - com( a zoolet..- mission. lie gave lectures of a.dvlce, Good Idea for a giraffe. We' might Tnsplratloar-lnforinnttHe touched start a zoolet society In which the dif- on anything which would be generally, ferent animals made up zoolets." seeking to helpful to the foreign-borWell,' well, another thought I snld become American citizens and to play Mr. Giraffe.. . their part "as. such. He had. two. This was his zoolet. thoughts .In mind. One was to ple ' nil the Information .necessary to pass-th.JFe called it The Glrnffe." The giraffe 'spoke to his neighbor-- : naturalization examination.' The I know my brain other was to give theln an UnderstandI can't have lota WT everything, ing and appreciation of America; of . And I certainly am tall whnf the 'country stands nr. of Its For I make up In height Its Institutions its customs; its What I lack In brilliancy, history. , And I've so. dull aji Intellect . Ideals, its aspirations and fh inspire That It doesn't bother me. hem to llv-- good American, citizens. ' Just better citizenship" is the .way . he sums .it up. .Conundrums What Is smaller than an ants month? Helping to make cut the questions What goes into its mouth. for teacher examinations fn the Colo. e e rado schools, the new dtreotor found ...WJint can he driven without a whip, out that many, of the teachers., espereins, or steeling wheel?. A nail, cially In outlying districts., knew less, e e e know" about the than 'a kid ought fundamentals of 'Americanism. So he W.lint hits. a bed and. never sleeps, a mouth and never drinks? A river.. organized an Americanism section in e e lie association. the State E lunation ' also formed the Allied Council for Why is a 8hoeinnkerlike a faithful lover? Because he's faithful to the last Americanism Committees, embracing e e . the various patriotic societies of the . If Is the happiness' opposite of state.. Meantime John C. Vivian, commandwhat Is the opposite of misery. of the Colorado department of the er woe? GIddap. Legion, had seen his work and Invited If your- rooster laid an egg in my him to become cKairnTa'n of the state From this Americanism committee. yard, whose egg would It be? Roosters nadon't lay eggs. .position he was advanced by the ditional executive committee to the AmericanWhy Is a dog biting his tail like a rectorship of the National on piohe where goes commission, ism good manager? Because he can make neering (as his fathers had done for both ends meet. venrs i.ef"re 'him), not with dreamy "e'le'tb's t ut with a practicality that Which weighs the most a pound of , n, ih- - heart of the problem, for feathers er a pound of ead? They An.e'"u both weigh the same. We Are Most fain-Jliesar- 1 on. n e - see g len-gt- - self-taugh- t. - fr forty-sevent- h .anti-foreig- n and Canton. . Lehi Mrs. Isaac Clark of city received burns on the arms and body Wood Tenders Love Feast ' as a result of a bolt of lightning which Manila. Governor General Leonard struck her .home. Mrs: Clark was Wood tender.ed a luncheon to memher hair with an electriq ap.curling bers of the legislature. H.e asked when the lightning struck pliance in. activities bene- her house and burnt out the their, meter ficial to the people, 'and gave his as- and sent a charge through the. curler surance that he would do all in his which butht Mrs. Clark. Her injur.power to carry out the work in which ies .are painful but not serious. ""Her all were interested. Manuel Quezon, son, .Boyd, 4, was standing near the president of the senate responded on door and was "knocked down by the' behalf of the legislature, promising bolt, but wab uninjured. Salt 'Lake City. Most points In the of the United States against the case Congressman Defends Suit Grand Canyon Cattle company, . inN. Y. BerSyracuse, Congressman tram H. Snell of Pottsdam is defend- volving the right of the defendant to ant in a $400,000 damage suit brought fence and to build pipe lines .over a Mrs. Edwina B. portion of thq public domain in' the by his sister-in-law- , Arizona strip and also to use the Snell of Syracuse, It became known water of certain springs-se- t apart by' when in were motions suit the here, heard in thd special term of the su- executive order for the use of the preme court here by Justice Edge-com- public, were decided in favor of the Mrs. Suell charges alienation government at the trial recently held of her husband's affections, and also in the Arizona federal court, accord-n- g to Information received here at alleges mismanagement of the $3,000,- field division headquarters of the 000 Snell estate on the part of the ' lands office. . b. lo-i- congressman. |