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Show THE Notes News From All Parts of UTAH reconstruction of the bridge across the East Jordan canal at Second South street will begin In the near future,. Sandy.---Oomplet- e Salt Lake City. Development of Iron deposits In the Iron Springs" district, Iron county, by the Columbia Eteel corporation will be started next week and pig iron for that corporation's roller mills on the Tactile coast wiH be produced in Utah blast furnaces not later than eighteen months hence. .This is the positive statement of L. F. Rains. R 'member William G. McAdoo, form- VMY FACE OEFICITES PACK HOW WHEELING tMBACdAiJto SI' ABOVHO you fUX AND Campaign Programs Washington. AS PARLEY GUY CONDITIONS TERMED UNSPEAKABLE; SWARMS OF FLIES KILL INHABITANTS American Steamship Captain Saves the Lives of Seventy Greeks by Some Very Clever Re- Notwithstanding SOLDERS BONUS SANITARY ' Strategy the fact there are no legal restrictions upon the amount of money that may be expended for campaign purposes this fall it Is entirely probable, accord- Earthquake Felt at Rome Rome. A strong earthquake shook this city Wednesday causing great alarm among the population. No damage however has been reported. The apprehension among the people was r stimulated by the recollection of shocks, although much less violent, which occurred in 1917 and continued a whole month. Ancona on the Adriatic, 1S5 miles northeast of tome, appears to have been the center of of Wednesday's shock. No reports damage there was received. sim-ilia- FIGHT JUGI BEGUN AT WAR 'VETERANS ANNUAL GATHERING ASK ONLY FOR JUST DUES Report Criticizing President And Dr. Sawyer on Treatment of Disabled Veterans Approved By Commander Athens. Turkey's suggestion that New Orleans, La. While his "budthe near east peace conference be dies" shouted and stamped their apheld at Smyrna should be rejected proval, National Commander once for all by the powers it they have Hanford retiring MacNider opened the fourth any consideration for the health of annual convention of the American their delegates, in the opinion of Legion here Monday with a militant American relief workers, some of declaration that the soldiers' bonus whom have arrived at Athens from fight has only just began. Smyrna with strange skin maladies From out of the long, hard battle requiring medical treatment They re- he and his aides directed unsuccessport that sanitary conditions in Smyr- fully to put the "adjusted compensana are unspeakable; the bodies of tion" bill over the top at Washington, horses and other animals and some MacNider asserted that "no one man of the Smyrna residents who were untouched by war, without kith or Jgin HARDING FAVORS CONGRESS TO killed in the disaster are still found in to those who served, no one group, the streets. financial or otherwise, can stand beEllsworth Pittsof of the American Harry Boyde ECONOMIC liHEE T BE RECALLED burg, Pa., auditor of the international tween the wishesfulfillment of what people and the committee of the Y. M. C. A. in Tur- they believe to be a just obligation." He made no direct reference to the key, arrived here Sunday after escorting 700 refugees to Mitylene veto by President Harding of the GOVERNMENT JAPANESE ALL NOVEMBER TWENTIETH IS TEN aboard the United states shipping bonus measure, nor READY TO ACCEPT INVITAboard steamer Casey. He is a member to the little group of senators who TATIVE DATE SET BY PRESITION TO ATTEND of the committee organized by Rear sustained the veto, but he left no DENT FOR OPENING Admiral Mark L. Bristol and has been doubt as to whom he referred as he But President Will Not Call VSuch Agreement is Reached Between HardConference Until Conditions ing And Legislative Leaders For Extra Session , Appear Favorable Of Congress For Success Washington. President Harding Is willing to call an international economic conference any time that world conditions appear to be favorable to the success of such a gathering. But absolutely n. steps toward launching such a project will be taken by this government until the president and his advisers are convinced that conditions are such that the world's economic problems will yield to peaceful settlement around the conference table as did the world's naval problems at the amamcnt conference last winter. This was the explanation put forward in official quarters Thursday for renewed reports in foreign capitals that the United States would shortly inaugurate a second Washington conthe ference to deal this time wit vexing economic problems that, have brought Europe to the verge of anwere other war. So circumstantial the reports that from Tokio came press dispatches reporting the Japanese government as anticipating such an invitation and willing to accept it. While entirely willing to undertake such a project in the same spirit that actuated the calling of the armament conference it is nevertheless the unanimous opinion of the president and his closest advisers that world conditions are not now favorable to the success of any International conference, whether inaugurated by America or some other nation. And until conditlons?rVad become more settled, it wns:,yfl Thursday, the United States vf ursue Its present policy of aldlifei:urope's rehabilitation wherever possible and In such ways as to' bring no Inrolvment in European bickering and politics. Severe rffssure has been brought to bear grille administration to "dip In" abroad. It has come not only from abroad, but also from American bankers who believe that without American participation in European counsels Europe Is doomed. Find Oil In Navajo Land Shlprotk, N. M. In the northeastern corner of the Navajo Indian reservation, nltout ten miles southeast of Shlprock, the Mldwent Refining company has made a discovery which, from existing indications, will make the Navajos the rivals of the Osage tribe of Oklahoma in wealth. At a of 755 feet the Midwest drilled into a sand which yield oil nneqnaled ,ty any field in the west and probably in any other section of America with the possible exception of rare Instances In Pennsylvania. d.-.t- h Costa Rica Appoints Delegate Snn Jose, Csta Rica. Former Pres- Hindenberg May Run for President Berlin. Field Marshal Von Hinden- burg h"S expressed his willingness to offer nmsolf as a candidate for elec tion to the German presidency, the The field Vosslsche Zeitnng state-- . marshal's acceptance. It declares, was at the request of the German National Peoples party. ident Gonzales Floras hns been selected to represent Costs Klca In the dispute with Great Britain over oil land concessions, which will be argued in Washington before Chief Justice Taft ns arbitrator The dispute concerns the concessions granted In 191u to Amory & Sons by t'Je government of Frederic Tlnoco and repudiated by the Costa Rlcan congress In 192L Golf Course Given As Security Chicago. Her private golf vourse near Elgin 111., hns been scheduled by Mrs. Charles Erbsteln, wife of prom- lent Chicago attorney, as security for the bonds of Ben Hecht, author, and Salt Lake City. Jsmes Cruse, whs Wallace Smith, Illustrator, of the novel "Fantazlus Mallare," charged with ds personally supervising and predn to send obscene literature tag The Covared Wagon" for ths conspiracy Warrants for Film corpora- through the mall. Famous Players-Lask- y Hecht and Smith, Chicago newspaper after to Lake Sail returned tion, Bnftale men, were obtained from United atrsnuous three-da- y stay Mates Commissioner Mason by critic island at -- Faauilus Mallare." Governor's To Consider Speed Laws Olympla, Wash. Governora of all the states west of the Rocky Mountains were Invited by Governor Lonls F. Hart of Washington to attend a conference In San Francisco November 6 to consider uniform gasoline tax and speed laws and other legislation thst he believes should be the same In all these states. He chose the date so that the governora might have titn to study aad submit to tbt legislatures of their states whatever program la adopted. Salt Lake City- - Jteph W. Tox, county crop pests inspector, and Juntas Fisher, chief deputy, were held in the county jail one night peadlog the filing of charges growing out of ao Alleged swindle in their department nn of Republicans And Democrats May Be stricted by Shortage Of Money Price. One man was killed and another injured In two successive cave-in-s in a coal mine in Spring canyon The men were Just above Helper. cleaning out the tunnel which has Near East Tangle Solved been closed since August 23 when two With the armistice London. Just trains collided is It and in the re- signed at MuJanla an end to putting was burned men sulting fire one of the the warfare between the Greeks and Turkish nationalists plans for the conto death. Salt Lake City. 'Traffic Safety ferences designed to bring about a Week," October 22 to 23, will Impress definite peace In the Near East are the following rules on auto drivers: proceeding In a less agitated atmos"Keep lights and brakes In order; phere. Two conferences to this end slow down to pass schools and child- are being arranged, one to fix the genren; obey traffic signs and signals; eral Near Eastern peace terms and vehicles coming from your right have another to provide for neutralization right of way ; watt for street cars to of the Stratits of the Dardanelles. start up before you start your car; sound signal before passing another Pocatello. Idaho farmers are busy vehicle; always pass to the loft of finishing the threshing of 23,772,000 vehicles ahead of you ; pass all street bushels of wheat, C.4S8.OO0 bushels of cars always on the right; at inter- oats and 2,890,000 bushels of barley, sections go past the center to turn and their preliminary reports Indicate Jeft; never overtake or pass another good average yield per acre, accordvehicle on intersections; give way to ing to monthly report of the Idaho Issued by right when slgnajed from rear; al- crop reporting service. ways signal before turning left arm Julius II. Jacobin, statlclan. Spring down for 'stop,' horizontal for turn wheat Is averaging 23 bushels to the to left, arm above horizontal for turn acre; winter wheat, 19.5 bushels; oats, 38 bushels; barley, 34 bushels. to right;1 report all accidents and numbers of cars concerned to peace officers. Accepts Raise Under Protest E. F. Orable, president of Chicago. Salt Lake City. 1L B. Crockett Maintenance of Way Brotherhood, secretary of state, has forwarded to the members of the the clerks of the counties of Utah the Friday telegraphed labor board railroad States United candicertificates of nomination of his organization would accept the dates for state and district offices, that an hour raise voted by wtiois names are to be placed on tha two cents of the board "under the group public ths for official ballots In each county protest" omlng elections next month. Price. County commlsslones from Carbon county called on Uie state road commission recently to present ths claim of their connty for a credit of about $30,000 for charges said to have been made during the past several years against Carbon county erroae-ously- . nowu Q OPPOSE SMYRNA POUTICAL LEADERS STATE THAT LESS MONEY WILL BE SPENT IN FALL ELECTIONS ing to party leaders In Washington Lake City. K. E. Caldwell, that fewer dollars will be spent in state engineer, has decided that an the 1922 congressional election by both extension of time for one year, dating Republican and Democratic parties from last March, may be allowed the than in any campaign In recent years. It is no sudden attack of political Granite Creek Irrigation company in which to complete its project. The conscience that has decreed this state of affairs it Is a necessity, and grim, company has filed on SO second-fee- t cold poverty. Both Republican and from Red Cedar creek. Democratic national organizations are 'Salt Lake City. One day in jail for broke at least badly bent. While leaders display a disinclinafailure to have their automobiles properly lighted, in violation of traffic tion to talk publicity about the state of ordinance 1SG2, was the sentence Im- party finances, privately they declare posed on three autoists by Judge N. that organization funds are lower now n. Tanner of the criminal division of than they have ever been at this sWige of the game, with collections coming the city court Blower and slower. Senator Medlll McCormick, Repub Ogden. A cut of two cents a gallon in the price of gasoline has been made lican, of Illinois, and Senator David effective by the Continental Oil Com- I. Walsh, Democrat, of Massachusetts, pany. The new price for the regular chairman of the senatorial campaign gasoline is now 26V4 cents a gallon committee, have had scouts out beatand 30 cents for the high test ing the financial bulrushes for weeks, but it has been slow work and not Ogden. Immediate action will be very productive, according to reports taken by county and federal officials to headquarters. to ascertain the ldenty of the persons What money cun be expended by who started the fires on the aides of the national organizations probably "Jump-off- " canyon, near the summit will be spent in sending speakers of of the mountains northeast of the national repute into the states of Ohio, city some days ago. The fire has Indiana, Michigan, New York, New been burning and the flames spread Jersey, Massachusetts, Missouri Iowa, over a large area. Nebraska and a few other states where the senatorial contests are es Brigham City. Beet digging has be- pecially keen. gun In the Brigham City sugar factNeither the Democrats nor the Re ory district and the beets are now be- publicans have been able to pay off ing hauled to the dump at the fact- the deficits that were Incurred during ory. the campaign of 1020. The Republican national committee faced an inEamas. More than 2500 cattle are debtedness of more than $1,000,000 at expected here from the DucheBne the close of 1922, only about half of ranges to be fed for market which has been paid off. The Demwere in the hole to the extent ocrats behas Fork. Beet Spanish slicing of some $250,000 a part of which has gun at the Utah-Idah- o Sugar com been discharged. pany's plant Ogden. NEPHI. UTAH S, BOTH PARTIES Salt er secretary of the treasury and director general of rati roads Uuring fed eral control will speak lnlSalt Lake and Ogden on the 26th of October. NephL The moving of the local apple crop is now in progress and it la reported one of the largest yields in local history. It is estlmuted at least 40 cars will be shipped. TIMES-NEW- Washington. A tentative agreement hns been reached between President Harding and legislative leaders to summon Congress buck to Washington in extra, session on November 20, thirteen days after the country decides on the political complexion of the new Congress at the polls, it was learned Friday. The decision resulted from a series of conferences the president had held with Republican leaders at the White House this week at which a fairly comprehensive program for the ex piring C7th Congress was agreed upon. The call probably will be issued no November 10. It is the present plan of the White House to drive the (lying 07th Congress full tilt right up to March 3, the date of its legal expiration, and then not call the new 68th into session until the regular 'winter session begins in) December. Mr. Harding desires to get Congress back on a basis of "normalcy." This etnhrnees the elimination of the almost continuous extra sessions which Washington has witnessed since the beginning of the Wilson administration In 1913. It is the president's opinion that Congress should not be in AVashington all the time as It has been for the last ten years. He thinks Congress should spend five or six months here and then go home. At the president's direction. Senator Warren, of Wyoming, and Representative Madden, both Republicans, chairmen of the 'senate and house appropriation committees, are remain ing over in Washington and working continuously to get the appropriation measures in shape for Immediate pre' sentation to Congress in December. The president plans to go to the Pacific coast and thence to Alaska, starting next May or June to be gone several months, and he cannot well go If Congress Is sitting in the capitol. He thinks next summer will be an Ideal time to get Washington "back to normalcy." Railroad to Spend Much Money Salt Lake. The Union Pacific railway system la now committed to a program of development of the Industrial and scenic resources of the southwestern part of Utah, tributary to the Los Angelos & Salt I.ke railroad line, involving the expenditure of somcwlwre In the neighborhood of Confirmation of this plan $Ti,000,000. has been given at the general offices in Salt Ivuke of the I Angeles & SaK railroad and th Oregon Short Line, following intimations made inring a program of Investigation end preliminary work which has occupied the major part of the past summer. Champion Wanta More Money Paris. The French boxing commission took up the question of the purse in the bout recently. It had been announced that the winner would receive 2K.00O francs and tho loser loo.ixio fraiifs. Manager Hellers, who ha charge of Sikl's Interests, was asked how .uch Sikl had received and he replied 75,(MK) frnnclf. The investigation was then proposed 'a determine the exact division of the rote. Rule of Reason Is Ordered Washington. Order went out from Washington Frltbiy afternoon that "a rule of reason" Is to be followed by the government's agent In enforcing tlte Daughter? bone dry ruling In American waters. The order came from Secretary of Treasury A. W. Mellon, who la charged with the enforcement of the Daughtery ruling, and they were dispatched to all diplomatic and enstoma agents abroad s well as la enforcement officers at borne. working in close cooperation with A. K. Jennings of the T. M. C. A. in his relief efforts. Mr. Boyde said to the Associated Press correspondent': "The 700 refugees just taken from MStylene were the last to be taken out of Smyrna. Their condition was terrifying. These people were actually being devoured alive by flies. It is so throughout Smyrna, for flies, thriving on the decomposed matter lying about, have multiplied by millions. "No girls between the ages of 15 and 25 were found in our band of refugees ; they had been taken by the Turks. "Captain Glover of the Casey, by strategy, saved the lives of seventy young Greeks, former army officers. He was sauntering through the streets of Smyrna when he found the Greeks under arrest and began to berate them for having abandoned his ship, threatening to beat them unless they returned instantly. The Turks were much amused, and, forseeing dire punishment for the Greeks at the bands of the American allowed them to reach the steamer. Captain Glover hid them in the bold until the vessel reached Mitylene." Mr. Boyde told how an aged woman refugee, mad with hunger, seized his wrist as he was waiting on the quay, imploring him to rescue her. In her frenzy she accldently lacerated his arm, and, he believed, infected him. A violent eruption was caused, whicn , spread to his forehead. This skin eruption is appearing In Athens among foreigners who come in contact with refugees. It also is developing among those who meet refugee workers. The indications are that immediately effectivo organization is necessary if serious pestilence is to be avoided in Greece. t Adrianople. The Greek military au- thorities have announced that the evacuation ot the Greek army in Thrace will take place In three stages, first, in the Adrianople district; second, around Rodosto, and third, at the Maritza river. Five days will be allowed each section to evacuate. The allies' officers have been directed to refuse inflexibly any extension of th five-da- y headquarters will until October 30. ptfrlod. Greek at Rodosto One of the questions which arose was concerning the telephone and telegraph wires under equipment which for the Greeks were dismantling transfer to Greece. They said they found the country denuded of such means of communication when they entered and that therefore they purposed to leave It In the same state. Allied officials have fUed a protest Legion Convention Now On New Orleans, La. Soldiers, sailors and marines of four years ago, mem-tier- s of the American Legion, are here for the fourth annual national convention, which opened Monday. It Is a convention which is scheduled to accomplish much business and shape policies for the future course ot the legion. Last year's American Legion convention in Kansas City, with Marshal Foch, Admiral Earl IVeatty of England, General I Mar. of Italy and General Jacques of Belgium as distinguished guests was a combination of pageant and re jnlon on a gigantic cale. Throngs Witness Coronation Alhajulla, Rumania. King Ferdinand and Queen Marie were solemnly crowned Sunday in the vast public square amid the planrilts of thousands of picturesquely dressed Rumanians. Promptly on the conclusion of the waa church service a preclusion formed, aad the sovereigns, escorted by the Duke of York, Prince Paul ot Jugoslavia, fee Duke of Genoa, the Infante Alfonso, Marshal Focn and tha foreign delegatfooa, BMjrtwd fre--a the chorea. carefully aimed each of his barbed verbal shafts at the opponents of "adjusted compensation" for the nation's men. "A great, well financed attack by interests which we cannot help but feel are sordid and selfish, has given us one little but those who the people at Washington are with us by great majorities," MacNider added, as lie dwelt upon the passage of the McCumberForney bill by a vote of 333 to 7 in the house and 47 to 22 in the senate. "We have only just started to fights he said, "The 'adjusted compensation legislations Is right' t We know it is right and right always prevails in a question of raisAmerica. It is ing the necessary fund. A maximum annual payment of $100,000,000 is nnt even an appreciable fraction of a rep-prese- nt get-bac- k nt simply camouflage, thrown us to hide the real issue. "It Is a question of promises un- filled, a question, of whether the man who offered his life to his country in time of need is to be left with the feeling that bis country is unjust and ungrateful. "That Is not for the good of the nation, that is not the desire of the people back home and In a republic their will will be carried out. It is our task and we shall accomplish it. Upon the condemnation of the national government's cure of sick and disabled world war veterans and the criticisms of President Harding and his personal physician. Brigadier General Cliarles E. (Sawyer, chief of the federal board contained in the l.a-pareport made public previously by A. A. Sprague, of Chicago, chairman of the legion's national rehabilitation- - committee, MacNider stamped his unqualified approval. g Brother of Secretary of State Dies Provo. Henry Wallace Crockett, 4l years of age, superintendent of the state mental hospital farm, and brother of IL E. Crockett, secretary of state of Utah, died here Sunday following an operation for apendicitis. Two Killed In Head-OCollision Rankin, 111. Two persons were killed and one seriously injured when two trains of the Lake Erie & Western railroad sollided hetid-cSunday morning. n n Crash Causes Big Damage Suit San Francisco. A libel for $1,125,-O0has been filed In the federal court here by the I nlon Oil company h against the steamer Walter A. The company. Steamship steamer, Walter A. Luckenbash collided with the oil tnnker Lyman Stewart in the strait here last Saturday night The Lyman Stewart drifted upon the rocks and all effort to dislodge her has been unsuccessful. O Lwk-enhnc- Forces In Germany May Be Returned Washington. Return of the American forces In Germany which recently has been taken up again for consideration by war department officials was discussed Monday with President Harding by Secretary Weeks. The Impression was given after the conference that return of the American troops who now number about 1.20O wus not unlikely wlTln a comparatively short time, although no official statement could be obtained as to any definite time. Yardmasters Given Increase d:ry with Chicago. An eight-houOvertime, which Is sM to amount to cent Increase In pay, nearly a 25 was granted approximately 2,000 on 20 class-on- e railroads and at six switching terminals by the United Suites railroad labor hoard Monday. This Is the flint time the board hns established rule and working conditions for yardmasters who now are claasifled as subordinate officials and subject to the board's r ir yard-miste- |