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Show THE UTAH TO BUILD PEACE CONCLAVE DENOUNCES Congress Declares America Directs Policy of Germany For Allowing Itself to Be Moscow - Moscow. proletariat Beaten In a manifesto "to the of the world" on the oc- casion of the forthcoming tenth anniversary of the outbreak of the World war, the fifth congress of the third Internationale in session here, attacks the ruling classes of all the countries which it holds responsible for the conflict. The manifesto declares the occupation of the Ruhr is a continuance of the hostilities and denounces the report of the Dawes reparation committee aa "only a hidden form of war." "The United States, whose pockets are crammed with European gold and supported by the French military forces," the manifesto adds, "directs the policy of Germany as a penalty for Germany allowing herself to be beaten. Only imposters could say that the decisions of the Dawes committee embody a peaceful democratic solution of Europe's troubles. The entente dictates its decisions by holding a revolver at Germany's head. "The antagonism between Japan and the United States growing out of the recent decision on the immigration question gives the problem the color of a racial struggle." The congress calls upon the workers and peasants to unite in efforts to prevent war, and urges1 the peasants of Europe and the farmers of the United States to join the revolutionary labor movement as the only safeguard of humanity. Whiskers pf Idaho In Washington New York. The portrait of C. B. Wilson of Soda Springs, one of the Idaho delegates to this convention, shone forth in the picture supplement of every New York paper Sunday A week ago Mr. Wilson morning. was written by every feature man in New York as possessing the finest set of whiskers1 in the convention. James Hamilton Lewis bows low in yielding whisker honors to the delegate from Idaho. A statistician on one of the New York papers presents a statement showing that the states whose delegations in the convention are supporting McAdoo by their solid or majority vote cast 225 electoral votes, while the states opposing McAdoo have 301 electoral votes. Name of Wilson Glorified Geneva. The sixth interational-labo- r conference closed here with the delegates standing reverently while resolutions1 were read glorifying the name of Woodrow Wilson as symbolizing forever the ideal of peace and justice. A copy of these resolutions will be sent to Mrs. Wilson, together with an announcement that the organization is to place a memorial to the late president. The conference proved a great success, having completed its entire program. It adopted a series of conventions calculated to contribute to the health and happiness of the world's workers and demonstrated the existing spirit of collaboration and conciliation between employers and workers, groups of which were represented at the conference. Japanese Attack American Flag Tokio. Rihei Okada, arrested on a charge of having cut down the American flag in the grounds of the American embassy here on July 2, has been remanded for early trial by the Tokio local court. Ilia two accomplices will be tried also. Tho flag which was rut from its canvas band, was formerly returned to Jefferson Caffery, the American Charge d'Affairso, Sunday. Paper Firm Head Drowned I). Clinton Smith, Pueblo, Colo., president of the Colorado Taper com. treasurer and pany of Pueblo, and manager of the Carter, Rice and Paper company of Denver, and for more tlinn a quarter of a century a resident of Colorado, was drowned In the Mount Princeton swimming pool, near Monte Vista, Colo. Disease Visits Wrecked City Loraine, Ohio Gangrene and lock jaw has broke out alarmingly among those injured in the storm which wept Loraine and other northern Ohio cities a week ago. Unsanitary living conditions were blamed. Thir ty persons were treated for gangrene nd lockjaw. Car-lMit- er Protest French Expansion Duosseldorf. Germany, Protests authorities nra that the occupation requisitioning more qtinrters, are put newspapers by the German which Interpret the requisitioning to mean that the French do not Intend to evacuate 'he DuesseMorf, Ruhrort and Du'sturg bridgeheads and the chambers of commerce have appealed Stresemann to to frelgn Minister see Unit the bridgeheads are treated like the Huj Itself. ed NEPHI, UTAH S, HQ PRESIDENT'S Our Pet Peeve FOREST ROADS U.S. PEASANTS OF EUROPE ARE URO. ED TO UNITE TO PREVENT WAR IF POSSIBLE TIMES-NEW- CALLED BY DEATH $197,771 WILL BE EXPENDED UPON HIGHWAYS OF STATE DUR-IN- G COMING YEAR f, Salt Lake City. Carrying out of the 1924 forest road program recently agreed to between the state road commission and the district forest office, is assured with the apportionment of $197,771 to Utah from the forest service highway and development fund. It will enable the service to meet a deficit of approximately $48,386 needed to complete the 1923 budget. Estimated to finish requirements DROPPED last year's work include $29,733 for PLATFORM the Kane county section of the Cedar-Lon- g Valley project; $24,377 on the Sevier road and $10,800 ECONOMIC GASE FROM PAYROLL for the maintenance of all completed forest highways. on the There was an under-ru- n Sevier-Cov- e MAKE3 PARTY DEPARTMENT HOLDS STATE Fort work of $16,524, PROGRESSIVE RADICAL CHANGES IN FORROUSING MEETING AT CLEVE. making the net deficit needed $48, EIGN SERVICE 886. LAND, OHIO The new program this year amounts to $131,143 including the following: $25,0000 for the Coal Support to Be Pledged to La Follette Service Undergoers Shakeup on Basik Creek canyon section of the Cedar-Lon- g of Rogers Bill Providing as Leader Though Not As CanFor ReorganValley road; $10,000 for the didate of a Third ization bridge over the Provo river on the Party e road; an additionit al $44,000 for the Sevier road; $25,000 for surfacing of An unprecedented Washington. Cleveland, O. A platform of econ. the Sevier-Cov- e Fort; $7,000 for the omic in the foreign service was shakeup reform further farm Widstoe-Escalancalling for road and $15,600 announced Wednesday by the state recognition of the department under for maintenance of completed forest aid and greater authority of the claims for of drawn been lias labor highways. recently enacted Rogers bill for reSome of this work will have to adoption by the progressive conven- organization of consular and diplobe pruned. tion which July 4th launched its matic activities. Retirement for age The money available for forest de- counter campaign removed sixty against the two and resignations names from the permanent rolls, and velopment will enable the service to major political parties. 1000 delegates in addition a reclassification from carry on 100 per cent of the budget The convention of approved for this year and. still representing groups In top to bottom was announced. progressive leave a surplus for purposes other every state, plans, One diplomatic and thirty-on- e conit is learned to than building roads and trails. permit Senator Robert M. La Follette, sular officials were retired as having This fund available for road con- its candidate, a free rein in his race reached the limit of 65 years; five struction only where construction against the Democratic and Repub diplomatic attaches who had been carried on an unassigned list were will prove of material benefit in lican candidates. opening up the forest resources Leaders guided by his wishes plan redesignated as "not reinstatted"; while the forest highway funds may merely to endorse him whole heart eight diplomatic and thirteen consulbe builded in areas not included in edly as tin independent and not as ar officials were demoted as failing forest reserves as long as they serve him up as a distinct "third party' to reach the required standard of ef-to reach the forests. candidate the United Press is au-- pcjjcy and two names were removed Development fund allotted Utah is thoritlvely informed. tuy resignations. lhe reclassification carried out by The road building budget $62,872. A telegram asking La Follette to for the current fiscal year which be- express his wish in an open letter for the recently organized personnel gan last Tuesday contemplate the ex- reading before the convention was board were declared by officials to penditure of $63,073, but of this $22,-50- 0 forwarded to him In Washington by have had the effect of placing the will be advanced from the so- - William H. Johnston, machinists entire combined service on a merit called 10 per cent fund which is in nnlon lender and chairman of the basis." From this time, they said, the service should be considered defindependent of the development ap convention. a profession, in which advance itely propriation proper. his keynote ment will Johnston delivered be dependent. lhe road development program speech at the opening session. embraces spending about $15,000 on Attack Utah Land Titles The K. K. K. issue, which split the the road from Kamas to the head of Democratic convention will not even Salt Lake, Titles to thousands of the Provo canyon; about $8,000 on be mentioned and the entire platform acres of land in Utah, now held or tho road from Vernal to Manila; will deal with a demand transferred by the state to individuals exclusively $4,000 in the Diamond fork; $2,000 for economic reformation. contested in adverse proceedings to on the Fish Lake road and about for be instituted The. program of legislation by the United States miscellaneous roads. for $5,550 Ell F. Taylor, local fed which the progressives fought in the land office. For road maintenance within for be embodied in eral land office register reported upon ests proper $8,730 has been set aside; last congress, will the declaration of principles. It will advices from William Spry, land $14,495 has been allowed for trail almost commissioner. Adverse proceed with the coincide completely construction and $5,298 allowed for are to be instituted In land total. offered ing by Representative platform maintenance of trails. Cooper, of Wisconsin, as the minor ling 57,000 acres which Is equivalent J. lie entire secky reported to Republican convention to ninety sections. Bomb Kills Manufacturer tion in every case Is not Involved. In June. here Cleveland, O. Harry Tunte, 20, an William Allen Cooper, the Wiscon- Most of the land is located In Carbon Massachusetts In honor student at The government is contest who presented the county. sin stitute of Technology was killed by a 1.41 congressman at the ing the state rights basing It J claim Follette substitute platform as he bomb of his own manufacture was that the land was of. either known and convention snatched it from a comrade while It Republican to nppear coal in character or was valuable in was asked booed, roundly F. Colling Snider, the before the hung fire. petroleum and nitrogen before Utah's progressive convention. companion, lies critically injured in title was attached. a hospital. It Is believed the boys Tokio Police on Guard Alleged Klansmen Sent to all for Fourth of were experimenting Ebensburg, Pa. Refusing the moIxindon A cordon of Tokio police July fireworks. (as been thrown oround tho Imperial tions to set aside judgment for a new hotel anil the offices of the Japanese trial in the cases of eighteen alleged Dawes Aide Sails New York, Owen Young of New Advertiser, according to a cable to members of the Ka Klux Klan and York, who served with Oenerul Char, the Times. The precautions ure taken ten Lilly residents, convicted of the Americans as a result affray and unlawful assemblage i: les (!. l'awes ns a reparations expert, to safeguard on the Leviathan of the incMont in which n Jap lower-e- connection with the fatal rioting at wns n passenger the flag lit the American embassy. Lilly, the night of April 5, Judge lie declined which sailed Sunday. to say what bis mission abroad was Japanese newspapers are not nllowe.. Thomas D. Finletter of Philadelphia men to member of the to publish any accounts of trie In- sentenced the twenty-eigh- t Kdwnrd N. Hurley. The Times says that Shldu-lier- a pay the costs of the prosecution and World war foreign debt commission cident. He said he iilso wns a passenger. apologized to American Charge to undergo two years' imprisonment d'Affaires Caffery within three hours in the county jail, the terms dating was going abroad for pleasure. after tho letter's request for an lnvi. from their incarceration. tatlon. Cnffery regards the affair as Named For Commissioner Panama Canal Has Big Month e Washington, Nathan I Miller for-m- "an Individual matter and not Traffic through the Pan Panama, of the nation." governor of New York and Ernest ama canal for the fiscal year Just B. Perry of Nebraska, were named by new record. Vessels ended set a as American the state department Dr, Larron New Dairying Chief through numbered .2"0 an I passing members of the Mexican mixed claims Appointment of Dr. the tolls were $2l,2!K).!Ml, or 3 p?r Washington, commission. of the new cent greater than the total for the C. W. Larson as chief The number of bureau of dairying of the department last f'soil year. Girl Forger Leaps From Train an act vessels passing from the Atlantic to Hutchinson, Kan., Ruby Clampltt, of agriculture, created under paying tolls ol killed when she Jerked of the last session of congress. Is tlie Pacific was forger wn as with 2I'.K go. Dr, Wallace. "90. 104, announced 111, by Secretary compand sheriff away from the Barton county with tolls and leaped from a speeding train. Uirson since IfJl ofhail been chief of Ing In the other direction the department's of $1J,4'.1.7tRi. The month of Junv from the Harton the dairy division The girl escaped She wns bureau of animal industry, the worr had the lowest figures for1 the fiscal county lail ten days' ago. which has been transferred to tne year with 377 transits an $1,792,921 ruptured In Kansua City, Kan., and of new bureau. tolls. was being returned to Great Bend. HIES HAS. Beaver. Haying is on in full swing with a short crop reported by OF POISONING most of the farmers. Some of the alfalfa is short, and in places the ' stalks are almost stripped of then End Comes After Five Day Battle at leaves1. Hay is selling in the fields Washington Hospital; Parents at $12 to $15, with little to sell. Hay Are Present When Lad hands axe scarce. Succumbs Provo. Joseph Nelson, architect of this city will build a forty-eigh- t on East Center Washington. Calvin Coolidge, Jr., room apartment, son of the president died Monday street to be completed befor fall The structure will be one of foul night at Walter Reed hospital of stories with twelve apartments' ol blood poisoning. The end canjie after the boy had four rooms each battled with the utmost bravery and Salt Lake City. The first mail fortitude for five days against a dis- from a terminus of the air mail route ease which had racked his body with to reach Salt Lake under the operapain and sapped the reserve strength tion of the new day and night flying of his frail constitution. schedule was brought to Salt Lake President and Mrs. Coolidge, who from Elko Tuesday by Pilot Paul P. had maintained constant vigil at the Scott. He arrived in Salt Lake at hospital, were at his bedside, hope- 1:50 o'clock in the afternoon, om ful, and cheering and comforting hour and fifty minutes out of. Elko, their son to the last. The mail was transferred to anothei A sinking spell, the fourth he had plane and at 2:15 o'clock Lester F. suffered in brought death. Bishop began his flight to Rocl Notwithstanding the use of oxygen Springs. He was escorted to the ' and other restoratives, the courage summit of the Wasatch range by A. which had withstood crisis aftei Claron Nelson, western division ail crisis and had beaten death off re mail superintendent. peatedly, was unable to meet the at Ogden. Hearing on the order to tack. The collapse began at 6:80 o'clock and he gradually sank into show cause why Weber county should not be permanently restrained eternty. He died at 10:30 o'clock. from the Utah Agricultural Every resource of medical science college paying con$1250 on the was brought into play in the vain for the employment of exteneffort to save young Coolidge's lift. tract An operation' was performed on the sion service workers was called in N. Kimball's court and left leg- last Saturday night to drain Judge James off the poison, and blood transfusions continued to JulyG.17, because of the Horn, plaintiff'i inability of A. and oxygen were resorted to in th counsel, to proceed with the case latter days of his illness. Mr. Horn is ill. The natural strength of a boy of on 16, however, which was counted Ogden. The request of the Ogdet as the most powerful resisting force Ku Klux Klan to participate in the to the creeping poison, was unable community Fourth of July parade it to meet the issue; and after having Ogden was refused and there ha fought a brave but always losing been much hauabaloo as a result fight he succumbed. Flaring hand bills were distributed One of the final complications and supposedly by the klan, asking the the one which the physicians were question in bold type, "Why was the unable to meet, was the formation ol klan denied the right to participate in the Fourth of July parade?" gas on the stomach. The organ was washed out repeat-edlSalt Lake' City. Frank J. Irwlt in an effort to put it in condof New York, chairman of the nationthe but ition to retain nourishment, al rehabilitation committee,. Disabled effort was unsuccessful. American Veterans of the World Three sinking spells Sunday night War was elected to the post of naA death. brought him to the point of tional commander at the election ol ilight rally Monday gave slight hope officers which marked the closing but soon thereafter he began again session of the fourth annual convento lose ground and he never rallied tion of the order in the Elk's club. TO CALVIN JUNIOR UNABLE WITHSTAND ENCROACHMENT Appropriation Arrives For 1924 Program and Completion of Work Started In Last Few Years Will Be Carried Out river-Summ- it Kamas-Stockmor- river-Summ- te J rs y again. President and Mrs. Coolidge bore up bravely. Soon after the death they went to the White House where the elder brother, .John, was awaiting them. Father Killed by Son 111. Dr. James M. Durin of Stewart, 56 years old, prominent physician, was shot and killed by his son Gilbert, 23, in a fit of anger at the boy to their home. Refusal-o- f answer a question asked by his father led to the shooting.. The father, angered by his son's refusal to talk ia said to have slapped him. The boy left the table and returned with a shotgun, killing the parent. Threats of violence against young Durin, wno is a graduate of Hyde Park High school, Chicago, caused officers' ;to hurry him to jail. He was held to the grand jury without bonds on a charge of murder by a corner's jury. Dixon, -- d , repre-sentativ- 1I7-I- hl American Doctor Released Del Rio. Texas Dr. Fred M. Rose of Del Rio, held by Mexican officials at Villa Aeuna on Instructions from Mexico City has been released. Secretary of State Hughes had made strong representations to the Mexican gov. ernment to either release Dr. Rose or It fill specific charges against him. had been stated unofficially in Mexl. can circles on the border that Rose bad been connected with gun smug, This Dr to Mexican rebels gllng Rose denied. Anderson Must Remain In Prison New York The appellate division nf the supreme court in a unanimous decision has upheld the decision of 'he lower court in sentencing William IL Anderson, former superintendent n if the New York league, to from one t three years in prison following conviction on a charge of The forgery In the third degree. decision means Anderson cannot possibly be released from prison before Chriwlmas and may be forced t" longer tirre i.i Sirr Sinz. spend Anti-saloo- j Salt Lake City. Attractions fo the coming state fair in the way of amusements will be determined upon by a committee of three from th executive committee, appointed bj the latter at a meeting in the ofices of the general manager. The committee decided to increase the charge for admission to the fair from 25 cents to 50 cents, in view of added attractions. Ogden. Charles Osborne, 35, wai when he attempted to leap from a brick loading platform of the Ogden Pressed Brick and Tile company to a freight car of the Utah-Idahcom Central Railroad pany at Ilarriaville, and fell between the platform and car, crushing his head and fracturing his skull. instantly killed o Midvale. James C. Denos, 31 years of age, resident of Midvale and an employee of the smelter of that city, was instantly killed Sunday, when his automobile in which three Hints Is Hit In Eye others were riding, ran off the high A encounter fistic Washington, occurred In the'loard of appeals of way between Garfield and the Garfield smelter and completely overthe veterans' bureau between I'.rlxa-diFrank T. Dines, the turned. Denos' head waa crushed by Geceral the steering wheel as the machine director, and a former service man. General Ilines received n blow In the rolled over. eye and grappled with his antagonist Ogden, The R. A. Moyea company not ascertained. filed suit In name was whose district the Second asserted Fr'.ends of General Ilines court against T. H. r.eacom, receiver that the blow wns aimed at him dur- of tho Denver A Rio Grande Western that were going on. Railroad company, to collect damages ing hearings General Ilines was taken to tho hosamounting to $10,300 claimed to have-beedone the Moyes ranch in Weber pital room of the veterans' bureau for treatment of bis injuries. Thoinos county by fire caused by sparks from Deavor of Houston, Tex., is the one a locomotive of the company. who is said to have mixed It up with . Trovo, Lee L. Baker, senior memthe director. ber of the law firm of Baker & Baker to attend the left Provo tills week Spaniards Suffer Heavy Loss of the American in the annual convention Madrid, A serious with the Bar association at Philadelphia, which Lna re,'lon of Morocco, convene there July 17. Mr. Is will losses. Spaniards suffering heavy Baker will the Utah State pictured In official Information given Bar and therepresent Utah Country Bar asso to the public. The Spanish casualties it Is announced, exceed 400, many of tlatlons. After the conventions Mr, which were caused by the shelling of Baker will be Joined by Mrs. Baker, their own troops In the confusion of who Is now attending the Democratic national convention In New York ana fighting at close quarters. At Tabor, ibey will board the S. S. Bercngarla were ambushed when Spanish troops attend the Joint convention of the they entered a trench occupied by 'jo American, Canadian and B.itUh Bat men wearing Spanish khaki, who associations at Ixindon. proved to be Moors. Logan. A complaint charging' Dr, Fire Causes Death of Three L. P. Gaertner of Montpelier, Idaho, Chicago. Three little girls d;ed with assault and was filed in lere from injuries resulting from the city court bybattery Morris Abramson playing with fire. Patricia McClelof Garland who that Dr, lan. 6, was fatally injured when her Gaertner stacked alleges him on the highclothing ignited while she and a way. brother nere playing with matches; Salt Lake City. Building conGenevieve Stutor, 6, died after her struction in Salt Lake City for June while she and of this clothing caught fire year exceeded that of June companions were trying to burn some a year ago by $40,170, according U dead grass, and Lorraine Longon, C the report of the city building inwas fatally burned while playing spector just issued bonfire with other children bout er I. China Cabinet Takes Form Peking, President Tstio Kun Is reported to have submitted to parliament the nomination of W. W. Yen Dr. Yen wns minister for premier. of agriculture and commerce In the which cabinet of Premier Sun Pao-cIt Is asresigned a few days ago. sumed that If the appointment of Dr. Yen la approved there will be practically no change In the other cabinet have re. posts, whose Incumbents inained In ofifce temporarily. News Notes From All Parts of. UTAH SON |