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Show 2V - 4. 43- - - SOUTH CACHE COURIER. HYRUM, UTAH Oscar Collins, aged 27, of Alma arrested with two men on a charge of violating the prohibition UTAH Mich., History of Past Week The initial steps toward the organclub in Logan ization of was taken last week. It is asserted that there are 150 men and women in Salt Lake City who are enslaved to the drug habit. 0 Should congress appropriate now for road building, as seems assured, Utah would receive . x The News Happenings of Seven Days Paragraphed INTERMOUNTAIN. Melting snows on the hills of the upper Yakima Valley, has caused flood conditions throughout the Yakiiua, Wash., section. State aid to settlers on logged off land to assist in clearing their holdings is provided in a bill passed by the Oregon house of representatives. The bill already has passed the senate. Whether the parents of a child are responsible for injuries inflicted by it to another child is to be decided at Pueblo, Colo. Helen Liktor, aged 3, died August 18, 1017, from burns received while playing at the home of J. Omlensky. The burns were caused by burning matches in the Stands of Paul Omlensky, 4 years old. On the eve of his departure from Focatello, Idaho, for Illinois, where he has accepted another position. Judge F. G. Bale of the faculty of the Idaho Technical institute declared that it is carrying service too far to expect educators to teach . young people on less salaries than are received by the ordinary street sweeper. A house joint memorial, memorializing congress to pass a law compelling the placing of tags on woolens, stating the exact percentage of virgin wool and otlxer materials, has been adopted by the Oregon state senate. Mrs. Minnie Cox, who shot and killed her husband, Albert Cox, member of the Denver police department, on October 30 last, was acquitted by a jury in the criminal court at Denver. She pleaded ' J. JFlannigan, aged 45, formerly of Kansas City, Mo., was found dead in a snowdrift back .of a cafe in Casper, Wyo. There twere no marks on his body to indicate violence. self-defens- e. DOMESTIC. Mrs. Charles Bynum, 22 years old, who shot and killed her husband at New Rockford, N. D., and then took poison, died Saturday. Her baby, 10 months old, has also been poisoned and is not expected to live.' Domestic troubles, according to neighbors, is believed the cause. Army planes from every station in Texas, New Mexico and Arizona left Ft. Bliss at dawn Saturday, February 12, to search for Lieutenant Alexander Pearson Jr., who had been missing since he left El Paso Thursday at 10 a. m. Relatives of Henry Gagenton, former soldier, have, it is said, received a citation from the war department, signed by the adjutant general and President Wilson, for bravery in giving his life Magen-toDn the battlefields of France. is working in Walcott, N. D. After criticising bank directors who allowed Francis J. Carey, aged 20, receiving teller for the National City bank of Ottawa, 111., a salary of $90 a month, Federal Judge Landis released Carey on his recognizance after the latter pleaded guilty to a charge of embezzling $96,500. Landis said he would have to think tihemat-- , ter over before sentencing Carey. D. C. Jackling, who is heavily interested in Alaskan minnig properties, announced at San Francisco that plans were being considered for transformation of some of the Alaskan gold mills In which he has interests into paper pulp mills. Mrs. Marion Peters, wife of J. R. Peters, vice president of the Fairbanks company, scale manufacturers, was killed when she jumped, or fell, from an eighth story window in an apartment house in New York. She had been suffering from a nervous disease. The American good roads congress, in session at Chicago, adopted a resolution urging that the road building program of the nation be started without further delay. Roy Fridley, prohibition enforcement agent,, has been arrested at Phoenix, Arlz., by federal officials, wtho charge that last October Fridley drove an automobile to Yuma, Ariz., on the California border, secured twelve cases of whisky, transported it to Phoenix and sold ten cases. That more than one billion dollars are available for the building of good roads, was announced by T. II. McDonald, chief of the federal bureau of public roads, in the opening address of the American good roads congress at Chicago. A total of U3,163 passengers flew 8,136,550 miles in commercial airplanes during the last twelve months without the loss of a single life, the Manufacturers Aircraft association announced at New York. n - laws, lias been formally charged with the murder of Mrs. Ellen Crowe, 25 who was found strangled in a fielc near her home a week ago. lives were lost and mort Twenty-sithan forty persons seriously injurec when a cyclone struck Oconee, Ga. Thursday. Only two of those killec were whites. After being closed since January 6 the Borden condensed milk plant ai Modesto, Cal., employing approximately 300 men, is to open again Febru ary 21. WASHINGTON. The house rivers and harbors .bill carrying a lump sum appropriation oi $15,250,000, has been reported favora bly to the senate by the commerct committee without amendment. Secretary of the Navy. Daniels has cabled Admiral Strduss, commanding the Asiatic fleet, for a report on from Tokio that five American sailors had been fired on in Vladivostok. The agricultural appropriation bil as approved by the senate agriculture committee carried nearly $206,000,(XK more than the $33,000,000 house total It keeps 200,000 men working full time to support the nations rat population. That assertion is made by the biological survey bureau in figures showing that there are as many common rats as humans in the United States and each of the 100,000,000 ot more destroys $2 worth of foodstuffs a year. The federal railroad labor board has denied the request of the American Association of Railway Executives for immediate abrogation of the national wage agreements with the brotherhoods and the establishment oi a new basic rate for unskilled labor predicated on local conditions. FOREIGN. A dispatch from Budapest says Admiral Horthy, the regent, has adjourned the national assembly indefinitely because of the incessant clashes over the question of restoring the Hapsburg dynasty. He invited the party leaders to a conference at which he personally advocated reconciliation. American opposition to the policing of Vladivostok by Japanese forces is creating a serious situation, according to unofficial dispatches from s Japan. The British government may have to pay 150,000,000 pounds in claims as a result of its control of the railroads during the war, according to estimates submitted by a government committee which investigated the situation. . Stringent control of the liquor trade in British Columbia is provided in a bill prepared by Premier Oliver to be introduced in the provincial legislature. The proposed bill would place the liquor business under control of a new nonpartisan board. The Hondurean minister of finance has submitted to the national congress a bill providing for the establishment of a gold basis for the gold currency of Honduras, says a dispatch received at San Salvador. Enactment of a law providing for relative to fusion by the is Austrian republic and formally demanded of the government at Vienna by the Grosse Deutsche party. The organization claims that such legislation would be .in fulfillment of promises made before the recent election in Austria. Marriages in Canada performed by duly authorized persons are legal, irrespective of the religious belief of the principals, the privy council in London, England, has ruled, apparently settling the mixed marriage question, which has agitated both Protestants and Catholics in the dominion for many years. Fighting in the open as regularly organized troops, Sinn Fein soldiers have invaded Skibbereen, a small town southwest of Cork. The Sinn Feiners raided the town, captured three prisoners and withdrew. ' The official report of the prefecture of police states that of 25,027 men and women criminals arrested in Paris in 1920, 4033 were foreigners. 'd The treaty of peace between soviet Russia and Poland was signed at Riga announced in a February 10, wireless dispatch from Moscow. The ministry of finance has reached the conclusion that the utmost sum Germany can pay in reparations is 150,000,000,000 marks, this including all she has so far paid in cash and goods, says a Berlin dispatch. The news comes from Rome that Italy is ready to participate in a dis armament conference. A high officir has declared his country could be counted on to answer any summons for such a conference which may be sent out by President-elec- t Harding. The total 1920 wheat crop of all countries reporting to the Internaat tional Institute of Agriculture Rome, was 2,650,000,000 .bushels, as compared with 2,550,000,000 bushels in (he preceding vear. - . Gex-man- y itis BEVS REVIEW CLAIM THAT WILSON MADE SUCH ' SUGGESTION BRANDED AS LACKING TRUTH. ' $100,-000,00- $1,129,573. Position at Peace Conference Declared to Have Been That Obligation by Allies to America Must be Paid. Not only is it untrue that President Wilson at the Paris peace conference promised the representatives of the allied powers that when the senate had ratified the peace treaty he would make every effort to have the United States government cancel the debts owed to it by the allies, but written proof exists that the presidents position was quite to the contrary. In a responsible and thoroughly informal official quarter this positive assertion was made Sunday night in answer to published statements that the senate committee on foreign relations knew that the president had given such assurances at Paris. The information that the senate committee had knowledge of a promise of that character by President Wilson became a matter of report in the capital Saturday after Davis F. Houston, the secretary of the treasury, had apon peared before the committee own his relations at request foreign and informed it in confidence that J. Austen Chamberlain, the British chancellor of the exchequer, had made a correct statement in his speech at Birmingham, England, to the effect that Great Britain had made overtures to the United States for the cancellation of the allied war debt to this government. ' Little of the details of Mr. Houstons disclosures to the committee have become known, but it was confirmed that he told the committee that the proposal mentioned by Mr. Chamberlain and concerning which there has been so much official mystery in Washington, had actually been submitted by Great Britain. Additional details obtained concerning the British advances along this line brought to light that the proposal had come directly to the treasury department from Mr. Chamberlain as head of the British financial ministry and not through the medium of the state department or any diplomatic source. The suggestion vyas advanced about ten months ago, but not in the bald form in which it has been understood to have been made. Great Britain, it was learned, had not asked that the United' States cancel the British war indebtedness to this government, but had explained to the treasury department that, in the opinion of the British government, it would be a wise procedure for all allied governments to cancel their foreign war debts. The proposal or suggestion of Mr. Chamberlain was that all intergovernmental debts be cancelled. As surances were given that if thfs met with the approval of the United States the British government would cancel all the debts owed to it by its allies. Washington. NOTED PIANIST CLOSES CAREER Term! Paderewski, nates Activities in Realm of Music. New York. The professional pianos playing career of the Paderewski is ended. The Polish musician announced his retirement, confirming recent dispatches, upon his arrival here Sunday from Europe. Piano playing is a closed chapter In my life, although I may do, some composing, he declared. Five years of hard mental labor in international politics in behalf of Poland have left their imprint on his appearance. Old age and worry have whitened this long', and bushy hair, while the lines in his face have deepened and the sparkle of hiseyes has . dimmed. Artist-Statesma- world-famou- , King Constantine Denounced. New York. A resolution protesting against revision of the Sevres treaty, denouncing King Constantine of Greece and praising former Premier Venize-lowas adopted by the League of Liberal Greeks in America. - s, Police and Strike Sympathizers Clash. Albany, N. Y. Albanys force of traffic police was mobilized Sunday in front of the state capitol to handle a crowd of several thousand persons who rushed a street , car and snow plow operated by strike-breaker- s. May Not Sleep in Churchen. New York. Three hundred unemployed men were denied permission to spend the night in St. Augustine's chapel of Trinity church, where they marched Sunday after attending services at St. Marks chapel. . William Wrigley, Jr., the chewing elected to gum magnate, has been head the board of directors of the Gunnison Valley Sugar company. Jim Georgilas of Carbon county lias comapplied to the public utilities a to operate for mission permission Scoand Colton between line stage field. War upon minors frequenting pool hails is being carried on by the police at Ogden, and jail sentences and fines are being urged in cases brought into court. Charles H. Wilson, 77 years of age, was found dead in his room in a Salt Lake rooming house. It has been decided that death, was from natural causes. Officers went to Alpine last week, where they raided a small still and arrested Clarence Nash, who is charged with having liquor In his possession. A big building boom for Price is to be started if the plans contemplated at a meeting of the Price allied chamber of commerce, held last week, are successful. While digging a pipe line at Provo Arnold Teay dug up the skeleton of a man. It is thought from all appear ances that the skeleton had been there for many years. C. B. Mowers, aged 72, a printer, dropped dead on the platform of the. Bamberger electric station at A jury decided that death was from natural causes. Joseph Clark, while hauling ice at Panguiteh, slipped from his wagon, landed on the' side of his face and was rendered unconscious. He is still ' in a serious condition. Charged with having taken two girls from Salt. Lake to Denver on December 18, Derwood B. McLohron, 24 years of age, and Jack Beckett, 23 years oi age, were arrested in Oklahoma City. Okla. Preparations are being pushed by the entertainment commit tee of Logan post No. 7 of the American legion, for the first annual to be given at Logan, Feb ruary 16. Following the shooting at Salt Lake of Detective G. B. Hamby and the kill ing of his slayer by police officials, nearly 100 men and women have been driven from the city as undesirable citizens. It has been decided by the city council to hold the hpmecoming al Panguiteh from September 5 to 11, both dates inclusive, the occasion beint: the fiftieth anniversary of the to of Panguiteh. Principal branches of the agricul tural and livestock industries of Utah, Wyoming, Idaho, Montana and Nevada will meet at Ogden, February 17 and 18, for discussions of the labor prob lems of the coming year. Ralph Reese, 31 years of age, was taken to a Salt Lake hospital from Soldier Summit, suffering from' burns received when a hot stove in the D. & R. G. roundhouse at Soldier Summit fell on him while he was sleeping. Utah canneries will reduce the pack of tomatoes (his year, and the acreage devoted to tomatoes will be cut about 10 per cent of the normal, according to H. L. Harrington, president of the Utah Canning company of Ogden. An Americanization school is being conducted at the Carbon county high students school at Price, twenty-fou- r All session. the at opening registering of the students are under 45 years, and some of them have attended school in their native county. They are residents of Price. Suit to restrain the dissemination of information that the American and Gem theatres are unfair to organized labor has been filed in the Third district court by the Swanson Theatre company at Salt Lake. The musicians formerly employed at tliee theatres are on strike. A change in the national guard of Utah is planned by Lieutenant Colonel W. G. Williams in the converting of one of tiie troops of cavalry in Salt Lake to a battery of field artillery. ,This will make a battalion of field artillery In Utah, and the adjutant general hopes soon to develop this Into a regiment. Harry C. Harper, aged 17, a Boy Scout of Salt Lake, (has just received a handsome bronze medal awarded bj the national court of honor because ol his courage and quick action in savboy ing the life of a who was in imminent danger of dashing to his death over an embankment In an automobile. Kays-ville- mili-taryba- - fiye-year-o- ld LUCKY STRIKE " Flavor is sealed in by toasting cigarette. Watson K. Coleman, nnTCnTG I Lawyer, Washington, Hfl I rm II Pll O Patent p 5 Advice and book tree. RateB reasonable. Highest references Bosteervioea. THE KREMOLAi wonder SKIN BEAUTIFUL. for n bad complexion. Dr. C. H. Berry or mail, $1.26. 2978 Michigan Avenue, Clue go And Find It. Brofks is most persistent Jones In looking for trouble. Bones Yes, that fellow will look for trouble where it has never been Cartoons Magazine. lost. Thousands Have Kidney Trouble and Never Suspect It Applicants for Insurance Often Rejected. Judging from reports from druggists who are constantly i direct touch with the public, there is one preparation that has been very successful in overcoming these conditions. The mild and healing is influence of Dr. Kilmers Swamp-Roo- t soon realized. It stands the highest for its remarkable record of success. An examining physician for one of the in prominent Life Insurance Companies, asn interview on the subject, made the tonishing statement that one reason why so many applicants for insurance are rejected is because kidney trouble is so common to the American people, hnd the large majority of those whose applications are declined do not even suspect that they have the disease. It is on sale at all drug stores in bottles of two sizes, medium and large. However, if you wish first to test this great preparation send ten cents to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y., for sample bittle. When writing be sure and mention this paper. Adv. Stylishly Sloppy. What a beautiful girl Yes. And with what charming piness she wears her galoshes. 1 WOMEN! USE Dye slop- DIAMOND DYES Old Skirts, Dresses, Waists, Coats, Stockings, Draperies Everything. K . Each package of Diamond Dyes contains easy directions for dyeing any article of wool, silk, cotton, linen, or Poor dye mixed goods. Beware streaks, spots, fades, and ruins mateBuy rial by giving it a dyed-looDiamqnd Dyes only. Druggist has Color Card. Adv. 1 k. In Style. Well, at last I can say Im right in That so? Yep. My busistyle. ness Is bad, too. Catarrhal Deafness Cannot Be Cured by local applications, as they cannot reach the diseased portion of the ear. Catarrhal Deafness requires constitutional treatment. HALLS CATARRH MEDICINE is a constitutional remedy. Catarrhal Deafness is caused by an of condition of the mucous lining the Eustachian Tube. When this tube oris Inflamed you have a rumbling sound Imperfect hearing, and when it Is entirely closed, Deafness Is the result Unless the inflammation can be reduced, your hearing may be destroyed forever. HALLS CATARRH MEDICINE acts through the blood on the mucousthesurinfaces of the system, thus reducing flammation and restoring normal conditions. Circulars free. All Druggists. F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio. Rather. "That man works by fits and starts. Fits and stops, I should say. Sure (Relief 6 Bell-an- s Hot water Sure Relief mVkfltiSL |