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Show --- - THE JORDAN JOURNAL, MIDVAL-..E, l:ff'AH r~,SCHWARTS FOUND .. SCOTT IS INS~NE 0.__1______I_t'sm_arki_ng------~10 i~RGTIG PLANES I ~ffi!li!1ffi!li!!li11@Ji~Ji~l~'8friliF.IfrilfiilJiilSr;lfrilfrilfrilJiil_!el Myton.-Work on the federal aid road under the supervision of Sumsian & Clyde, contractors, on the My· ton-Antelope section is progressing in ~ satisfactory manner. The camp ha!! been established not far from the river, near the Antelope end of the road. About twenty-five men are at worlr, with twenty-one teams. Nearly a mile of the road grade is finished, and in a short time they expect to start on the bridge. Richfield.-The officers and - dlrectors of the Sevier County Fafr asso· elation are working assiduously to make the county fair this year the most successful in the history of Se vier county. Dr. I. L. Nebeker is the manager and he has spared neithe1 effort nor expense to obtain the best attractions available. An excellent rodeo will be given, with cowboys from neighboring counties participating. Ogden.-A branch of the treasury department of the Southern Pacific system is to be installed in Ogden, according to word received l;lere. Under the present method pay checks are mailed from the San Francisco office for the entire Salt Lake divislon. Under the new system the entire payrolls for the Salt Lake dlvision will be handled out of Ogden. This will necessitate the addition of several employees, who will probabIy be transferred from the general offices. 1 CH EM 1ST IS LOCATED IN HOTEL AT OAKLAND; SHOOTS SELF WHEN OFFICERS ARRIVE. SLAYER WILL SPEND REMAINDER OF DAYS IN INSANE ASY· LUM AT CHESTER, ILL. I Confess!on Written By Schwartz Tells One Time Millionaire Convicted Of Killing Drug Clerk Is Twice Saved From Gallows By Executive Orders I .. WELL ONE DAY IN BED THR E AR[ fORGED BACK That Was the Life of Mn. ~ Hollister Until ahe Began Taking Lydia E. Pinkham's ATTEMPTS TO FIND LANDING FAILURE AND AIRSHIPS RETURN TO STARTING POINT Vegetable Compound 1 Wyandotte, Michigan. - "After m?' baby was born I did not do my own work _ . . ·.. . . for six months aBd · \ . .., could hardly take 1 Of Crime; Murdered Man Was Seeking Employment At His Laboratory Oakland, Calif.-Foiled in his efChlcago.-Russell Scott's relatives forts to perpetuate the "too perfect and friends have saved him from the crime," Charles Henry Schwartz, gallows. The former millionaire, convicted cheated justice here by ~nding his of murdering a drug clerk and twice 1 own life. Trapped in a hotel apartment in saved from execution within a few which he had been hiding since July hours of the time set for the spring29, when a mysterious explosion ing of the trap, has been declared inyvrecked his Walnut Creek laboratory sane. and left behind the mangled remains A jury in Judge Joseph B. David's of a man since identified as Gilbert court, after listening to testimony W. Barbe, itinerant missionary, and legal wrangling for four days, de-Schwartz sent a bullet into his brain cided that Scott's life should be spardying instantly. ed on the ground of insanity and the His act brought to an end one of prisoner w;,il be sent to the Chl!!stet" the most intensive man hunts of the asylum. Under the law, if Scott recovers his west and an investigation in which reason the death penalty must be exscience was pitted against science. An investigator and inventor, ecuted, but no person in a - similar Schwartz, according to Pnlice, plotted case bas ever been hanged. Scott a gigantic insurance murder hoax, emerged from his ordeal with little which failed only because of its per· show of emotion. His wife, Mrs. Catherine Scott, her face etched with fectRess. lines of grief, paced the floor of the Schwartz left behin:l a confession that he had slain Barbe, claiming it court room and corridors almost all was done in self defense. In a letter of the three and a halt hours that the written to his wife apparently in an- jury was deliberating. With her was ticlpation of suicide, should the offi· Russell's mother, a large matronly woman, who had difficulty maintainBrigham Clty.-Arthur Woolley, at- cers -close in upon him, the inventor ing composure. torney of Ogden, was elected com- · declared that the murdered man came Thomas Scott, the father, set apart mander of the Uta:h department of to him seeking work. An argument most of the time, lost in thought. followed a refusal to employ the man, the American Legion a:t the 'fast ses· Morbidly curious men and women aion of the seventh annual conven- the letter said, then a struggle in kept the vigil in the dimly lighted tion held here. He was unopposed for which he killed the man whose iden- court room. Shortly before the jury the position and the convention en- tity he later endeavored to merge was brought in, word came to the thusiastically acclaimed his ascend· with his own in a suicide hoax. family group that a verdict of insanency to the position. Police, however, declared that they _ have evidence showing that it was a ity-therefore life-had been reached. Russell's wife sat tense as the jury Park C1ty.-The local board of edu- case of deliberate murder that Barbe cation met and decided to call an was lured to the laborato~y on prom- filed in. V\Then the clerk read the verdiet, declaring that Scott "became a election for the taxpayers of the I ise of employment and slain. lunatic or insane," after February 4, Park City school district to determine S h t t th h t 1 · 0 _e whether or not the district be bondc war z came 0 e m 1925, Mrs. Scott slumped froward and ed for $200,000 for the building and which he was located. the mornmg af· tears of relief flowed freely. ter the explosion at h1s Walnut Creek · equi ppmg o f a new h"1gh sch o01 . . place. He told the propnetor that Eleven Indicted On U. S. Charges Salt Lake City.-Organization of ''he was in trouble for bootlegging New York.-The federal grand jury the secretaries of chambers of com- and wanted to lay low for a few returned indictments against eleven merce and commercial clubs of the days." 1 state into one ~od_y to be know~ _as This explanf\tion was accepted, but 1 men alleged to have used the mails the Utah Assocmtwn of Commei Clal , comparing his quiet roomer with to defraud in a stock selling enterOrganization Secretaries, whose ob- ! printed descriptions of Schwartz, C. prise. The indictment charges them ject will be to work for the advance- W. Hayward, the hotel proprietor, be· with making false representations ment of the state, was perfected at came suspicious and advised the po- and promises i~ the sale of stock of a meeting held at the Salt Lake lice. Officers surrounded tne hotel; the Ertel Oil company, the Great chamber of commerce. J. H. Ray· they knocked at his door. There Northern Gold Mines syndicate, the Arkansas and Osage Oil Company and burn, general secretary of the local was no answer. the Parco Oil Company. A publication chamber was elected president of the They started to batter down the called the Financial Analyst, sent new organization. door. A single shot rang out as the through the mails throughout the UniSalt Lake City-Albert John Weber, door gave way. Officers, entering ted States was the basis for the former chief justice of the supreme found Schwartz already dead. The charges. court of Utah, died at his country bullet had entered his right eye and home in Mill Creek after a long ill· crashed through his brain. Holdups Make Rich Haul ness due to a complication of diPolice declared that information New York.-Five robbers held up seases. Judge Weber was 66 years of given them by Hayward, the hotel the store and factory of Harry Bleiage. man, forged the last link in their weis company, manufacturing fur'"' Day of chain of evidence against Schwartz riers, herded six employes into the W oo d s Cross-J oseph ::s. for h1s room m which to basement and ransacking sixteen pelt W ood s Cross was re t urned t o hl·s fam - arranged . . . b t f than • hrde the mght before the explos10n -11y a ft er b mng safes, escaped with furs valued at a sen or more · _ at Walnut Creek. Thrs, , f IVa mon th s as th e resu It o f an a•.· occurred . . of- $100,000. The robbers· gained admit· H"e 1s - sa1"d to have fleers declared, proved conclusively tance by posing as union workers. t ac k o f amnesra. _ . d n alias and to that the crime was as they have mamThe employes were tied together in b een t rave I1ng un er a . tamed, one of the most cleverly the basement and guarded by one his Cor b d l h ave sudd en y remem ere . rect name when he heard the name Pl~n~ed and executed murders m man while the others calmly ronthe sacked the safes in full sight of the d . Upon h 1-8 crrmmal annals, and shattered o f George Day men t rone · . return Day said that he planned to claim of sel~·defense set up m the let· crowded street. This loot was thrown . name an d a dd ress tatooed tel" left behmd by Schwartz. into a waiting automobile. h ave h IS on his body, so that he can be idenJudge Weber of Utah Dead Rebel Chief Ends Life With Gun tified in case of other attacks of Am· Salt Lake City-Justice Albert John San Antonio, Tex.-After days of nesia. ·nay, who is a veteran of the world war, has suffered three sue!:\ Weber, 66, referee in bankruptcy in vain search for work, passed in exthe federal court and former justice treme misery, General Juan Ricardez attacks in all. of the state supreme court, died at his Broca, former chief of the De Ia HuerSalt Lake Clty.-Impressive funer home in East Mill Creek, from ta revolution in Yucatan and in conal services were held at the Tabel"- Bright's disease. Justice Weber had trol at the time Governor Carrillo nacle for John J. McClellan, Taber- been ill for the past eighteen months. Puerto and other socialist leaders nacle organist, who died at his home His last collapse occurred about ten v.;ere executed, was found dead with a Friends, associates and p'ersons ft"om days ago, when physicians practically smoking gun at his side in Puerto all walks of life attended and paid gave up hope for his recovery. Carrillo, Honduras, it was revealed their last respects. here. He was incognito, passing under the name of Rodrique Garcia. Movie Stars Pledge Help Vernal.-The Whiterocks Irrigation Los Angeles.-Motion picture stars, company has a crew of ten men with Demands National Economy producers and directors pledged more teams at work constructing a dam London.-Winston Churchill, chanforty feet high across Paradise creek, than $10,000 toward the rebuilding of the Santa Barbara mission, which cellor of the exchequer, during a disin the lower end of Paradise park, cussion of the national economy in was damaged during the recent earthabout twenty miles north of Lapoint. the house of commons, said that "the quake, at a luncheon here. or the The scene of the activities is located time has come to call a decisive halt" in the Ashley national forest and the amount $4,200 was paid in cash. The dam is being constructed under a for- list of cash gifts was headed by Mar- in national expenditures. The economy discussion occupied most of the est service permit. The company's ion Davies, who gave $1000. day's session, which is the house's development work to be completed last until November 16, until which Delaware Judge Dies this year calls for an expenditurE! of Wilmington, DeL-George Gray, for- time adjournment was taken. $18,000. mer United States senator from DelSalt Lake City.-The Third district aware and retired judge of the United Rubber Boots Save Girl's Life court is asked to restrain Salt LakE States circuit court or appeals, died Reno, Nev.-Because she wore rub· City and its ofncers from interfering at his home here. ber boots on her father's farm, a with the conduct of pari-mutuel betdaughter, aged 14, of A. Aeshelman ting on horse races in a suit file:d ;h of Yerkington, Nev., is alive after beItaly Will Exploit Oil Fields the county clerk, by the Utah St~,te ing struck by a lightning bolt. It Rome.-Tl!e government has approFair association and others interested took 20 minutes for a physician to in mutuel betting at the state fair priated 30,000,000 lire, about $1,20G,-I revive her when the bolt laid her ungrounds within the corporate limits 000 at present quotations for study conscious. The doctor says the boots and exploitation work in the oil lands of Salt Lake City. prevented her recervmg the full of Albania. strength of the bolt. Brigham City-Exhalting the Amer· : lean Legion as the greatest force for Jew Will Be Buried In Palestine Wilson Gift Found At Club goou in the United States because its New Britain, Conn.-For the second Los Angeles, Calif.-A beaten sil· members are made up of those who time in history an American Jew wiH ver water pitcher, highly valued by are giving of service to God and be buried in Palestine. The- body of Mr. and Mrs. Robert P. Miller, as a country, as they did in wartime, and Louis Gans, founder of the New Britgift from the late President Wilson, expecting nothing in return James A. ain Zionist organization, is to be takwas recovered by police with other Drain, national commander of the le-- en from its resting place in this city loot checked at the Lion Tamers' gion, opened the seventh annual con· and sent to Jerusalem for burial club, an organization of negro boys. vention of the Utah department here among the remains of the ancient rul- A porter employed at the iron works with an address bE>fore a mass meet· ers of the kingdom of David. Mr. managed by Miller, officers said, ad· ing of Ieuionnain~s. members of the Gans was 60 years old at his death mitted that he had stolen the Wilson American Legion auxiliary and ~ti and had devoted his entire life to tha pitcher from the office safe and aens. success of the Zionist movement. checked it at the club. I I l I - . . I I Aviators Will Attempt Seven Hun dred And Th:rty Mile Flight In An Effort To Find Suitable landing~; For Planes care ofmyownbaby. I always had a pam in my right side and it was 10 bad I was getting_round shoul· \Vasllington.-Buffeting an Arctic ders. I would f 1 gale over the perilous ice crags and well one day and then dotted Fjords of Eilesmerland, two feel so bad for three I naval planes of the MacMillan polar or four days that 1 would be in bed. Ont; expedition were unable to find a nee· I Sunday my mother essary landing base within 120 miles came to see how I of Etah, Liuetenant Commander Boyd was, and she said a friend told her to reported to the navy department by tell me to try Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. So the next da_y : got a bottle and before it was half taken I got relief. After I was well again J went to the doctor and he asked me how mile- flight f~·om Eta~ to a place I was getting alon~. I told him I was w he! e MacMillan believes there is a taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable j landing place available for the planes. Compound, and he said it did not burt any one to take it. I am always recom· The expedition set out at 9:10 P- m. mending Vegetable Compound to I In the brilliant arctic night and the others andthe I always have a bottle of it adventures of the air explorers was 0 '1 hand. ''-Mrs. HENRY HOLUSTER. described by Byrd as follows: R. F. D. No.1, Box 7, Wyandotte, Mich. "After passing Cape Sabine a magLydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Con!'" nificant spectacle opened to view. pound is a dependable medicine for all All the fjords were covered with ice women. For sale by druggists everyand snow and the land showed wherb. around us and beneath us seemed to , be nothing but deep valleys and d~s \ ert mountains rising abruptiy from the fjords and in many cases covered with snow, with great glaciers running down the water's edge. There was but vet"y little open water in the Soothinq a..nd Hulinq fjords where landings could have been made. .,_ "Ellesmere continued its rugged course and it became apparent no base could be found on the land in /or the directio~< we were going. AI· Coughs and though the n ·e sence of ice in fjords Lung Troubles that ran parallel to Cannon fjord inSuccessful for 59 yean~, dicated that there would be no land· 30c and 90e bottleooing place in the water at the end of ALL DRUGGISTS our journey as the ice was too rough ) to land on. "At ten miles from Etah fog began to settle ahead, too thick to see through, so it was decided to return to Etah. Had to fly at altitude of 3800 feet to get above low clouds un- HINDERCORNS Bemo.-ea Coma. c..I· til we reached sight of sound. Indi- louses, etc., stops a.ll pain, ensure& comfort to t.h-. teet, maltes wa.lkllllf easy. llic by mall or a.t ~ cator showed thirty-mile gale blowing gists. Hiscox Cllemlca.l Work!~, P&tciWlfUe, N.Y. from the north and water in the har· l!:MPLO'i"ER8--Men and women are rurnlshetl bor was quite rough when plane land- by ua for labor~ trades. professions and e.ll vocatlons. Communicate with Us. Western Voed beside Pe.ary at five minutes be-- cational Bu., 209 Central Blk .• Pueblo, Colo. fore midnight." \~YO~~ IS lI::.~:~i: _~::u:~:~~~~l a;t~;;:in:i~l 7~~: I 1\ GASOLINE MOTOR UTAH G I [LO 0 n Ir u OF NEW TYPE OUT SCENE OF ft n i• nJ 1 GIGANTIC MERGER WITH Bl!..· CASTLEGATE, UTAH RECEIVES DELUGE OF MUD AND WATER LIONS OF CAPITAL REPORTED IN AUTOMOBILE WORLD FROM CLOUDBURST New Automobile Of Entirely New De- Damage Will Run Into Thousands Is Belief; Helper Gets Taii·End of sign Will Soon Make Its AppearFlood; Railroad Is Out Of ance On The Market; New Commission Fuel To Be Used Los Angeles.-An automobile of revolutionary design, driven by a new and powerful brand of synthetic gas· oline, is about to be offered the publis, it was revealed to the United Press by a chemical engineer of na· tional reputation attenting the convention here of the American Chern!· cal society. Financiers behind the project, which involves a $5,000,000,000 business merger are not ready to make an official announcement of their plans, but details of the proposed gigantic deal have been laboratory goa· sip among technical men for months, accor-ding to this authoritative informant. The proposed merger iQvolves Gen· era! Motors, Standard Oil, the Dupont Chemical corporation and other leading motor and petroleum firms, it was learned. General Motors will install the sensational engine In .their five makes of automobiles, according to the proposed scheme. The Dupont company will make the new motor fuel in their vast laboratories out of raw materials accumulated by the Standard Oil buying organization. Distribution of the fuel will be effected by the nation wide chain of Standard Oil and its affiliated concerns. "Any authentic information would have to come from headquarters," one engineer said. ''I need not point out, however, that the advantages of such a combination are apparent to any intelligent observer." The new fuel, which is to be marketed under the name of "Synthol,'' may be manufactured from petroleum, coal cf lignite. Its base, accord· ing to analysts who have tested the product, is benzoL Several varieties of alcohol and a mysterious metallic catalyst, not like tetra! ethyl lead, make up the mixture. Its action in the new motor designed tor use Is said to be more nearly like steam power than any internal ' combustion engine yet devised. The gas in the cylinders at higher compression than used in an ordinary engine, expands without explosive force and hisses from the exhaust valves like esca);ling steam, according to tenicians who have watched the work· i-ngs of the motor. These advances alone would place the new motor and its fuel far ahead of any automobile now on the market, it was said. In addition, it is claimed that the new motor is never troubled by carbon deposits, no poisonous fumes are generated and, because of the extreme smoothness of the power impulses, the engine has a flexibility undreamed of by those acquainted with internal combustion motors. Gear shifting is practically unnecessary because like a steam engine the motor is almost as efficient at low speeds as when running in normal highs. The new automobile will run approximately forty miles to the gallon, although exact figures on the efficiency tests of the motor and fuel are said to be guarded with greatest secrecy. Prlce.-Damage estimated at from $15,000 to $20,000 resulted from a disastrous flood which swept down Willow Creek in three successive waves about 2:30 o'clock Tuesday afternoon, August 4th, destroying everything in its path, and inundating a large part of the town of Castle GaGte. Traffic on the main hightway was cut oft altogether by the washing out of the state bridge while train move-ments on the Den,ver & Rio Grande Promotes Skin Health Boschee's Syrup Western were interrupted for a period of about four hours. The tail end of the flood is said to have struck the town or Helper, but little damage was done there beyond flooding ot cellars. Aside from the destruction of the state highway bridge, the principal The Biggest Tobaceo Plt>e Improv.,ment Ia 26 yeant The Split-Stem- PiPe Ls one of thl!< loser is the Rio Grande railroad, ac· unique inventions of the age_ Insures a. cording to reports. The rushing wa- Hylan Says He Was Loyal To Smith most healthy and comfortable smoke. Recom· by phyBician~. No more pipe cleaner• ters literally picked up the "Y" track New York.-Mayor John F. Hylan mended necessary Prlce $1.50, for two weeks only. leading into castle Gate and carried revealed in a statement here that he Write or Send money order or check to S'tat• Sales Company. 38 Park Row. New York Clt:r. it several hundred feet from its for- had been asked by V\'illiam G. Memer position. The roadbed was wash- Adoo at the Democratic national coned away. vent!on last year whether he would The main line track of the line accept a nominatio~ for vic~ presikeld. it is said, but was covered with I dent. The mayor saJd he declined out two feet of mud for a distance of of loyalty to Governor Al Smith. Hyseveral hundred yards. The west- l~n's statement was l3sued in refutaWrite for attractive bound train from Denver was unable twn of a charge by Tammany, which booklet of Parisian to leave Helper for Salt Lake until is opposing the mayor's aspirations perfumes, powders. roua:es, etc. 8:15 p. m. The track had, however, for re-election as mayor, that Hylan 31!1 West 34th St., N.. . .Pio!P'!'! been cleared and put into good condi- was disloyal to G-overnor Smith at tion again at a late hour in the even- the last Democr~tic convention. "McAdoo asked me 1f I would consider ing. The flood due to a cloudburst in the nomination for vice president on a Few Roads Carry Traflic the canyon, came in three waves. Just 1 ticket with him," Rylan's statement said. "I told him I was with Governor A very large portion of the highway what damage was done to residences 1 iri the canyon is not known, as the Smith for the nomination and would traffic of the country is carried by a ruther small percentage of the ~roads. canyon road was impassable Wednes- not accept." A detailed traffic surv~y made in day morning. Sheriff's officers at Tornado Hits California Town Maine by the bureau of public road& Price, however, expressed the opinion Brawley, Calif.-The little town of shows that the primary system of the that there was not a great deal vf Rockwood, four miles from here was state, consisting of only 7 per cent damage in the canyon itself, a .. most of the total mileage, carries 53 perreported demolished by a cloudburst ot the residences there are built high I' cent of tbe traffic In the state. and two tornadoes, which met over up on the hillsides. So far as known the little settlement. No casualties no Jives were lost, and no cne was I were reported. The twisters and No Time to Drop Wheel seriously injured. heavy downpour are said to ha·re un~ There is a motor driver who should Great boulders were washed down I dermined the roads and streets of be especially careful at tbe railroad the canyon by the torrent, and the Rockwood. Packing sheds, barns and cro~sings-the man who habitually bed of Willow creek is said to be I houses were laid low. Telephone drops whatever he Is doing when thechoked with rocks and debris. whistle blows.-li.'xchange. poles and wagons were carried into Many of the houses in Castle Gate have from two to three feet of mud the air. Emergency crews were rush· Well, Tell Him,. on the ground floors, it is said, al- I ed tQ Rockwood by all public utility companies here. "Pa," inquired his strictly U'p-to-th~ though none of them was washed minute offspring, playing w1 · · his from the foundations. The work of Fire Destroys Logging Camp radio set, "what's the wave lengt"h forcleaning up the mess resulting from Seattle, Wash.-A forest fire which Santa Claus7;,-Western Christian Ad· the flood is progressing rapidly. J broke out on the north end of Mercer vocate. island, in Lake Washington, adjacent to Seattle, wiped out a logging camp Germal)y Favors Revision Improved lcebo; • Geneva, Switzerland.-The German I of the Miles Lumber company. The By use of a newly invented evap~ government has filed with the league !I blaze covered more than 1000 acres rator that fits in the ordinary Ice chest of timber. Fire fighters were hastily of nations its ratification of the con- . gathered from picnickers along the anu is run by water power, any icebox vent!on for the simplification of cusmay be changed into an Iceless refrig1 shores of the lake in Seattle to help toms formalities, which thirty-four erator. nations signed at Geneva in Novem- residents on the island battle the flames. ber 1924. (This convention, at th 3 Busy Days on the Farm framing of which the United States Churchill Denies Statement These nre busy times on ll1e farm_ was represented by observers, beLondon.-Winston Churchill, chanAn Atchison county farmer tells thecame operative November 27, 1924.) / cellar of the exchequer in a formal (}Jobe: "I'm cutting wh.e at with one \ statement emphatically denied that at hand, pluw!ng corn with the other and Policemen Held For Stealing ( the time t~e truce was _arranged in putting up lluy with my feet."-KanChicago-Sixteen policemen attach- . the coa.l dJspute he s~ud to A. J. sas City Stu r. ed to the detective bureau anu the Cook, secretary of the miners' faderStanton Avenue station have been in· ' ation, "Remember, Cook, this is not A cyni<'al mnn Is one who bas had valved in charges of participating in a gift from us, but it is cheaper than experience; a cynical woman is one a raid on stolen property valued at 1 a revolution." Mr. Co.lk in a state- ll"ho hasn't. $90,000, which had been held under ment attributed this utterance to the police guard. I chancellor. .. I I I - - - - - -- · Vaudeville Actress Dies Los Angeles.-The theatrical team of Courtwright and Lee was divided here by the death of Jenny Lee, aged 75. Miss Lee, known as an emotional actress, played with Jefferson and Booth and with her husband William Courtwright, starred in dramatic sketches in the days when vaudeville was known as variety. In recent years the couple had been doing character work in motion pictures and travel ed extensi'Jely. Americans Off For Morocco Paris.-An accident marred the departure ·for Morocco of members o! the American Volunteer Escadrille. The machine containing Major Hap· pe, the French commander of the es· cadrille, and Lieutenant Colone Austen Parker of Helena, Mont., was broken when it was forced to land at the Le Bourget airdome just after taking off. Both of the aviators were safe. Six machines began thQ flight without accident. Cannon Joins Church Danville, IIL-"Uncle Joe" Cannon became a member of the Methodist church here, taking membership in , ·the St. James church, in which his 1 wife was an active worker until her 1 death. By birth, the former speaker 1 was a member of the Quaker church : at Guilford, N. C., where he was born I 1 eighty-nine years ago. While he ati tended regularly and supported the 11local church, he never bad been a member until n.ow. I BELL:ANS Hot water Sure Relief ELL·ANS 254 AND 75¢ PACKAGES EVERYWHERE |