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Show .JOURNAL, IUDV TO MARK PRO. PRESIDENT CALLH QECLARI8 KELLOGG NOH -t.J"rrLE GREIS 01' WORK ON IDAHO'S SHORT OF UftaUI-T BIG RECLAMATION DAM LONDON ALARMED OVER TURN IN CHINA; KILL FOREIGNERS IS CRY OF MOB Cltbena of Entl,.. State Taking Great American 8ew •l•17'1 Communication Al.o C.~l"- All open Threat · lfttereat In Coming Event at ; Ooea 1Wot N. . Out· He American Falla; Many Neta· 8We ttellt to fib Country _.. . tO be Pre.. nt Powers of World Are Watching And Are Ready For Action Should Force Become Necessary To Quell Troubte Ame~ J'alls, Idaho......The .-t ~n Wuhlqton.-Preaident Calles of *• IMUllclo, In a atatement luuecl by the embauy here, aasertecl Sec· of it. .... that hal .,... P*-tecl ia the :aortb'"".:- retary Kellosr'• recent statement COD· era eountry will take plaee at Ameri· Wu41d a "threat" aplnet Mexico's ean l'aba, l.tJ' lJtb, whea the Ameli· aoftl'eiQtJ aad that the lmplleaUon Cllll Palla dam dedlcatioa will oeear. that Jhdco stood "on trial before the wetJd• bl the guise of a defend· A Clllllrd 'M*"'I-tect a enjoy the and "Ia et~~ence would only mean an 21,100 will he oa haDd wlddl the committee baa lneult. lg Furthermore, President Calles add· ~eeL One of tb features will he the paaeant, ..Spirit of Idaho," ed, Mexico "does no accord to all:V and the m~otb daylight fireworks torelgn coUDtrY the right to Inter· show wbJdi wll1 be presented for the vene In her d0111estlc affairs, nor Is b:t tba Hit~ Fireworks she dillpotlecl to subordinate her Ia· tcoili1J)illl)' of Seattle, with Billy Foy terilatloDal relations to the exigen· of tbe FQ Show Producing com· cles of aaother country." liexlco, the statement continues, is 1>'1111unr of Portbu)ld acting as director. ot her International obit· eonecfous by T'lae paceant may be directed hme1 W. Evans 'Of the Foy Show pUons and is determined to comply l»rochldne eomp&af. Kr. Evans 111 With them, as a proof of which it oue ef the greatest di· mentions the establishment of claims nct.n of W. kind of entertainment commissions for the consideration of •n the PMifie eoaet. There will also claims held by foreigners agalnet be namerCMIS ahe1N, ricles &Jd con- llutco for losses aaatalnecl during e•lll.OM w Mlp eatertain the tremen- revoluUODS. President Calles • also regrets that doaa crowelL Crop eonditions are better in this Secretary Kellogg mentioned In his eeetion of the C0111ltry that a.er be- statement reports of an lmpendlilg fore in the history of Idaho. The revolution In Mexico "since this last farmen JU"! enthusiastic ovet the atrlrmatlon tends to cast some alarm pi'Oipeetlr for a banner year, and In tJae world In regard to the condl· ever:ron. iJ looking forward to this tiona of my country." cielebratftn with the greatest of inter· "The statement that the govern· meat of the United States wlll con· elt. to support the government of Unue w event tbe ;pqbUdty Jivea MeXIco only so long as It protects sprad all over th eoDti¥nt. laleb of tiM laM &o bl aerved by America& Interests and Uvea and Falls l'eHnrolr il at complies with Its International en· J~llMI7 UDder 11Jltivation, lnat req,uires ncemellta and obligations," he deaore nifalle water au)$ly. Row- clare~. "emiMMlles a threat to the Mme ae;w tracts may be "'Yerefcnty of Mexico that she can not overlOC* and rejects with all enbrfulht iJt, llid..adiDI ibe eJV." ~ion ol around CIU.ac that "the statement UDder M!l'el, W1litla ocCalioMd sovem~~~~ I mat .,.rtieipatton ba the unclert&Jr.! referen• elao aftirms that the Amer· ':!~:::: 'the reaerYolr under the eric lean ambassador has succeeded In . ~IUU• con.truetion ·wm held 1,700,000 protecting American as well as for· feet of wate~nough to coVel" etan Interests," President Calles asman:r acru a foot in depth. It serts that "if he ha1 thus succeeded, will he OWJr ~ mil• long, with lie has no right to charge Mexico ari a'Veraft wt& of tbtee and one- with f&llure to protect such Interests, and attention should be called to the half mile~. Till eaterpriie wu fillatlced, uide fact that said ambassador does not f'rom the pnnupeat participation, represent any other foreigner, but through diStrict bond iasuu, the first his fellow citizens, and .Mexico could one befnc of the super-district, made not admit that without her previous up ~rgel)o of the :J.'win Falla North authorization, the American ambassaand South side traeta, and amount- ,or should ac:t In behalf of persoJJ.s bag tQ $1.'100,000. Later upper Snake or interests allen to those of his River valley district. came in for country." "If the government of Mexico, as nearly a million. The8e larger elemente, with .ome smaller and the aflrmed, is now on trial before the government utilization, will uae the world," he says, "such Is the case entire atorap, which however, may with the government of the United be ~ to 3,000,000 aere feet States, &II well as those of other coun· with an increaee of aboat twenty feet tries; but If It Is to be understood in the heignt of the dam. Including that Mexico Ia on trial In the guise tbe irrication plant to be installed of a defendant, my government abso..,..~ government fa( the Minidoka lutely rejects with energy such lmpuutension, the eoat to which more or taUon, which in essence would only less preliminaey work has been in mean an insult." progress fow yean, is estimated at •·u""""'•uuu, w.ith a poewible total of 8porta Writer on :4thletlc Board IU~~IBOI~.l~~~Oo!'OO if the :reaervoir capacity Pocatello, ldaho.-John H. Kane, ti.d-t.,.W. be increased to it& m~mum. sports editor of the Pocatello Tribune ~ received by the general has been appointed by qovernor ectDUllittee indicate unusual interest Charles C. .Moore as a member of the eeltbration on July 13, espe- state athletic commission for southin the Snake River valley. eastern Idaho. George McKeown of Ah&Dgementa are bemg considered Wallace 'and Thomas Sherlock of for special trains from southwestern Boise complete the board. Kane Idaho and the Twin Falls tract. and takes the place left vacant by the poaaibly one from Salt Lake and Og- death of Thomas Rickard of Pocallall)' will come in autos, and tello. It Is understood that a meetniitiliii' arrangementa are being made Ing of the new board will be called at tot 2000 ears. Negotiationa are. un- Boise shortly. der war with Belli')' Thiele of Portluul, a leactiug nortbwestem caterer, Mounment To Inventor to have ehaqe of feeding the crowds Bar Le Due, France.-A monument and with other companies as to ento the memory of the first horaeleas tertaflllllenta and conee88lons. carri..-e is to be unveiled at Void, The committee estimates the erowd In Lorraine, ))y former President at not I..a tlaaa 25,000, based on re- Poincare. NteboiM Cupot, who, In ports froa over IICRlth Idaho and 1'149 lnYentecl a ateam car which traY· from ac:lJo{Blq atat-. eled at a rate of two and one-bait Jfo,._ reco__. ..- ...,._ent; * u hour, Ia reprdecl as the Ia· Yentor of tile fONrunner of tbe preaUtoiiiDbUe. ...t mtlu -y Defen.. Dar &qulpment Offered Waahtncton.-Tbe war department has accepted an offer of Preeldeat Themas P. HeiU'Y of the Ameriean Automobile association to place the orcanizatlon'a resoureN and equlpmellt -.t the disposal of the depart. meJlt 1n connection witJl the defeue te1t July fth. Corpa area command· en have been directed to 1et In touch with the reginal and local reppresentatlves of the association. Ninety Year Old Vet Gets Freedom Sacramento, Cal.-Wlllfam Slmpaon 90-year-old confederate veteran aJlCl (he oldest prlaoner In Callforni~~o has been granted hla freedom at last. Liberty and a tomfortable !tome far in the Kentucky re:at of hie ~~Mae at Pewee Valley came at Folsom Jirieon In the form of an Immediate parole from the state board Of priiOil directors. Arran~& ~ ftlr the old aoldler's tranaportadaa fe ~tueq alread1 Jsaye -)'II ..... beef Champion II better becauae of ita pe.-tlaht, two-piece CODJtnJdioo, which allow• lt to be taken apart for c:leanlna. Shanghai.-One foreign life tor every Chinese life taken In the Shanghai riots was the slogan adopted by Chinese in posters distributed after the killing of William MacKenJEie, an English subject. Othewlse, the situation remained unchanged, a PAL S6ething city of indlpatlon and unrest. Foreign officials expressed the opinion that the circumstances surrounding the assassination of W. W. MacKenzie, a British subject, here, indicated a deliberate attempt to Interrupt the progress of the negotiations with the Chinese government and to revive waning animosities. I Tbey emphasized the necessity tor ONE 18 DEAD AND MANY HURT CHINESE ATTACK PATROL SHIP I the Chinese authorities to control the WHEN STRIKING MINERS AND lawless agitators operating around ACTING AS CONVOY TO GUARDS CLASH the borders of the foreign settlement. SMALL LAUNCH TROOPS GAllED U. S. GUNBOATS TO OU lET MINEHS ARE FIRED UPON Washington.- Antiforeign agitation Corporation Rejects Offer of Men: Second Outrage May Summon Wash· In the Canton vicinity Is causing unMine 8torea Are Raided of All easiness In that place and nearby ington Officiala To Take Drastic Provisiona; Third Time ReAction To Prevent Consul General Jenkins in~lUes. For Troopa occurence formed the state department In a dispatch sent from Canton, June 14th. "During a student demon11tration Wuchow on June 8, a mob yelled 1D Halifax, N. S.-Ftve hundred troops gunboat Hongkong.-The American have reported for duty In the Cape Pampanga, eacorung a launch operat- 'kill foreigners," and threw stones at Breton coal fields as the result of ed by the Christian college from Han- the American Baptist hospital." the armed clashes between atriklng mta- an island, was fired upon by Chinese message said. ers and British Empire Steel corpor· tighter&, near Whampoa and returned atlon pollee at New Waterford. These the fire with shots from Its threeNew York -The attention of the cJaehecl resulted In the death of one pounders. great powers', engrossed in the anti· miner, the serious wo~ndlng of aDforeign movement in China, has again No American casualties were reother and Injuries to two score. Fresh been focussed upon Shanghai by news ported. disorders were reported In New Of the murder there of a British sub· This Is the second direct outrage ject, William .M. MacKenzie, and the Aberdeen, a suburb of Glace Bay. within a week in a wounding or Miss Mary Duncan. It was reported that the company's against Americans sharp factional strife waged between food shops at mines 12 and 14 had The Incident Is said to have reYunnanese and Cantonese troops for been cleaned out by a mob of miners. sulted from a campaign of sniping possession of Canton and Honan. The It was also reported, although confrom foreign motor cars. tiring of Yunanaese for· firmation was Jacting, that the ware- tirst waa the American officials believe there ces on an American flagged launch house at No. 14 aad the offices at be quick diplomatic actlon at will bearing Mr. and Jofrs. Frank CrampNos. 16 and 12 were ablaze, with no ton and Mr. and Mrs. .Montgomery Peking. water naiJable. MacKenzie 11.uu ms eompanion were Ogden and the wounding of Mrs. In clashes for possesion of the New Crampton. rtdlng in an automobile when stopWaterford power house, several hunAfter the Chinese had fired on the ped by seven men in coolie dress. dred rounds of amunitlon were fired. Pampanga, the latter anchored In the MacKenzie's protests at beln( held up After the fighting, pollee took refuge river, close to Its assailants and wait- were greeted with laughter and then in the jail at New Waterford and re- ed until they were silenced. There· a volley of bullets. He slumped over ports of plans of miners to raid tt after It resumed Its journey. the wheel, fatally shot, but Miss Dunwere heard. The Pampanga was Intended as can, although wounded, kept the car The power plant was captured from protection for the college launch, running until the British settlement miner pickets by a surprise attack at which was helping remove foreign· was reached. dawn and recaptured by the miners era from the Christian college, which The antiforeign movement In China at noon. William Davis, ~ miner and had been a target tor the factions' has been particularly directed against father of nine children, was killed, fire. the British and Japanese, the trouble and Gilbert Watson seriously woundMost of the foreigners in outlying originating In the suppression of fireed. The power plant is the strata· districts have been transferred to arms of a riot at Shanghai particlpat· glc point of the colliery system. places of safety, either under British ed in by strikers from the JapaneseA large detail of provincial pollee protection at Canton or within the owned cotton mills. departed for Sydney on a regu~r British-controlled city of Hongkong. train several hours before the troop The Canton situation Is reported London.- A most serious view Is trains left Halifax. unchanged with the Yuananese and taken here of the situation in China J. W. McLeod, president of district Cantonese still strivln; for the upper and there is growing anxiety over 26, United Mine Workers of America, hand. the possible d!lvelopments. who has led the strikers In the presThe British government has given ent difficulty, says that the miners Crowds Fight To See Harry Thaw no Indication of any further action offered to place their grievances in New York.-Traffic was jammed than a recent note delivered in Pethe hands of the minister of labor or when Harry K. Thaw, who came back king and pending the return from a mediatory Jx>dy with final power of to Broadway after a week's absence Geneva of Foreign Secretary Chamdecision. This the corporation, thru at Winchester, Va., emerged from a berlain it is not supposed that a more J. E. McLurg, VIce president, has re- cabaret. He spent the evening and definite line will be adopted. It Is fused {o do, according to .Mr. McLeod. early morning th~e doing nothing understood that the government atH~ added that the miners had already much but responding to welcomes by taches importance to the expected accepted conditions for intervention Rialto "belles and sipping ice. water communications of the British ambaslaid down by James .Murdock, minis- and orangeade. Seve1·al hundred curl· sador to the United States, Sir Esme ter of labor. our persons crowded to the doors to Howard who is due from Washington, Twelve thousand miners have been see him. He seemed startled and where he discussed the situation with on strike for five months. The strike fled to a taxicab. Curlou<J folk pur- Secretary of State Kellogg. started wben several collieries were sued him through Central park, then closed and store credits were sull'- left him alone when he returned to h1valld Takes Airplane Ride pendecl for several thousand miners. the cabaret. His bill for the evening, I Seattle, Wash.-Aithough Dr. Frank In negotiatlone for a settlement the which Included $2 table d'hote din· corporation baa Insisted on a 10 per uera for himself and two male om- R. Loope has been a bedridden invacent wage reduction. panlons, amounted to $36. Of this lid for fourteen years and is comrellTroops have been called to the amo.!nt $5 went for a Up to the head t:d to lie motionless. he took a twenNon Scotia coal fields three times in waiter, $3 to his table walter and $1 ty-two-mlnute ride In an airplane. A Chorus girls hand mirror held In his hand reflectto the hat checlrer. the last three years. amused him during the evening and ed the earth below, as Dr. Loope canhe was Introduced to all who took aot even turn hie head. Despite the Blaat Hurls Dancera Into Sea part In a revrew. He told one girl fact that the Ri&hts Were backwards Atlantic City, N. J.-Flve persons she reminded him of Lillian Russell. and upside down, Dr. Loope declared are bellYed to have been drowned Thaw declined to dance, as he said •1e got ILS much fun out of t)le flight wben aa exgloaion, foUowecl by fire, he had not kept up with the modern s a small boy gets on his first trip deatro:recl the pleasure boat Crystal, steps. Even an old-fashioned waltz, to the circus. forcing thirty persons, inclucllng the played for his benefit failed to shake crew. to leap overboard while on a his determination not to appear on La Follette Celebrates Birthday pleasure crulae eir;ht miles off At· the floor. He said he was going to Washlngton.-Senator Robert II. Jantlc City. Tbe exploelon 11 believ- stay In New York until he had seen La Folllete or ·wisconsin celebrated ed to haTe been causecl by a cigaret every cabaret. his seventieth birthday anniversary end thrown down a hatchway. The at his home here, June Hth. All the Attempt At Suicide Falls body of Deborah McKnight, 18, was brought ashore by · coast guards, Los Angeles, Cai.-Dr. Clifford A members of his family were present while a patrol boat is continuing the Steepleton, 35, tailed in his attempts for the occasslon, and a sheaf of telsearch for John Hannum of North· to commlte suicide because he drank egrams came from friends and admirfield. Warren Dilks of Linwood, Jos- too many poisons. The various drugs ers over the country to cheer the eph Wilson of Northfield and .Mar· acted as antidotes to each other, po. senator, who Is suffering from an attack of bronchitis. tha Weiss, still missln. lice doctors said. Warren Stone, Labor Leader Dead CleveJand.-Warren S. Stone, prea1 dent of the Brotherhood of LocomoUve Engineers and one of the lead1Dg labor leaders and labor finanof the country, died In a hospiclers tal here. Mr. Stone went to the hospital to be treated for uraemic poisoning. Stone became ill several weeks ago upon returning from New Yorlt City. He was ordered to the hOQital at .oaee. For a time physl~ w1ao atteaded him declarecl that tile . . . . . , . . not. HJ'Io.. Military Grounds Become Foreats washlngton.-Establfshment to na tlonal forests on six minltary reservatlona has been authorized by Pres· ldent Coolidge 08 recommendation ot W eek s. The reservation£ Secretary are at Camp Knox, K:v.; the Fort Brady target range, .Michigan; Fort .Meade, South Dakota; Fort D. A. Rus sell, target and maneuver rese"atioa. Wyoming; Fort Huachuea, Arizona. and Baeanna provlq grolhlds, ill m Inola. Plus Co. Champion Spark ToWo,Ohlo ~.Oar.. LaGdoa., Part. Poatal Toll Filllat• Locuata Funds raised by a one centat.~l domestic postage stamp in Mexico to ftght the locust pest have already proved sufficient to start the campaign. Double the Life ot Your Shoes with USKIDE ... ,..1.2!:.!. ........._.... _...,\...fill., -.-4 ,.,. a Beffel' H-1 ••u.a.•• 81'aiNG-8RP H..,_ United States Rubber Company Done Barber-What shull I put on your head, sir? Customer-My hat! I Do vour friends l1111glt at you? Yoar frieada notice how your cat 1'1111L If the motor knocks and rattln and faila to work snMiothly, they mq enJo7 your predicament and Jllpgb. lfllllflla on wm keep ycilt iraotor in tip-top abape. It will ~t pep, power, .and seat Into lO'I'" 01r aDd give It a aew pip on mileap. EDJo:v cldtluc to tbo fuDeat. Ba7 I ODl7 Mu ·&lw OD. I' 'f!!u: OJ! ~ Mona! o5ur • San F'Tancl800, Cal .., CaL Loa _ipiiiaiiil .... _,._._._ _ ~~- JL VIUt ~ Gr Jal It lm't how bard you work or how long-It Is what you accomplish that COWltS. Never Failed Her in 60Years ••111iwn'l~ ..... beeaa~IDIIIY ........ ..._. ............ . , _ fcx _.,~ ........... ..y ~oiL ~·-· -. ...... - - - Beecham'• Pilla to 6dl 110 nU.... cha worR headache• Ulll Mil lin" Mn. o. a-u. l'lnollurlh. ra. Fw JlllBB SAWPLE-wri&e B. P.AIIaa Co., 417 CuW s - , N- Yodr ..., ...... , _. . .1 liD ............... Hoover Visiting In California . . C01Uciji<Ui~:-· sic1 ·='d• ... Palo Alto, Cal.-Secretary of Comoilmala r..u oclocr Mrs. merce Herbert Hoover and Hoover have arrived here for a stay at their home on the Stanford universtty campus. They are here to -~~;;y;;;;~p;;;;;;;;=;;;;=;;;j~;;; I attend commencemr:mt exercises at which their son, Herbert Hoover Jr., will be graduated from the university, and to be present at his wedding the following Thursday to Miss Mar· caret E. Wataon of San Francisco fn the Stanford memorial chapel . I ·······'• ...... |