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Show ' .J •· ' , THEJORDANJOURNAL,MIDVALE.UTAR - ALABAMA TORNADO I REPEAL ASKED ON 1 l~KES MANY liVES I EYS WIND AND RAIN VISIT SOUTHERN STATE AND CARRY DEATH AND DESTRUCTI ON makes vour food do you · more good. A Wt~aryB_ird_-----..:..JIO ·TAR IFF RIGHTS 0'-1 _ _ INHEAITANGE TAX !ACHES AND PAINS DESIRE OF GHINA I ALL OVER BODY I S·TATE EXECUTIVE S MEET WITH HOUSE WAYS AND MEANS COMMITTE E TO PROTEST CONFEREN CE IS OPENE'D WITH PROPOSAL FOR AUTONOMY TO BEGIN IN 1929 Government Usurps Powers Belong· lng To Subdivisions Says Gover· nor; Fifty MiII ion Has Already Been Paid Former Premier And Foreign Minis• ter Has Sweeping List Which Is Placed Before Delegates; Discuss Many Points Mn. Proctor Reports Great Benefit by Taking Lydia E. 1 Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Shafl)sbur~, Note how It relieve. chat stuffy f~Unl( - after hearty eadna. Sweeten~ the breath. ~ovee food pardc:lea from. the teeth. pvee new vlaor: CO tired nerve.. Comes to you lre.h, dean and full.fiavored. U. S. Troops Are Called To Guard Devastated District; Intense Heat Is Given As Cause Of Tornado Troy, Ala.-Sixtee n persons were reported killed and more than a sr..ore injured by a tornado which struck Pike county, Alabama. Many homes were laid waste, causing thousands of dollars damage. Relief measures were undertaken and first aid was rushed to several communities which bore the brunt of the terriffic storm. Victims who fled here were sheltered by citizens of Inexplicab le Neglect Troy and the local hospital was taxed With an army pension of $5 a week lying nccnmulatecl for five months In to capacity in taking care of the the post otlice because he did not take injured. time to get it, Jeremiah Kenny of After sweeping through this secMunster. Ireland, was arrested for -+:ion, the tornado rushed on its way ne~leding his five children, after one southwestwa rd. hnd died of stanation. Loss of life was reported in the Good Hope section, at Luverne, in the Oak Grove neighborhoo d at Union Springs, in Comer and in Spring Hill, the last three places being in Barhour county, and at Eufaula, where three negroes were reported killed and several persons injured. In the Good Hope section, seven miles west of Troy, four members of one family wt:re killed, and two otbers probably fatally :'.njured. Five negroes were killed near here and six near U:1ion Springs. Persons near the pa~h of the stonn, aroused by the terrific wind and the cries of the injured, worked in a heavy downpour of rain and vivid flashes of lightning for hours, rendering aid and searching for the missFlapjacks and syrup-how ing. The dead and injured were scatthey spread sunshine in tered along the roads, in the fields hearts [and stomachs} and near the demolished homes. these nippy days! T empt• An emergency call was sent to Troy ing!Tender! Easytomake ! for aid and many of the injured were Easy to digest! brought to the Mas•onic hospital. According to reports reaching Troy, much damage was done at Brantley, • Albas stands for Bater ~ealif~ Glenwood and Goshen, but no loss of life was reported from either place. The tornado followed intense heat Find Dinosaur Track• In the Panther mine of the United and thre!l.tening weather and was folStates Fuel C'Pmpany, near Salt L&ke lo~ed by a severe ekctrical storm. City, great dinosaur tracks, two and three feet neross. have llPen found . Mrs. Duke Dies In Poverty The trnrks are in sollrl sandstone, sur· New York-Mrs. Lillian Duke will rounded by black coal. follow her fonner husband to the ending a romance of multigrave--so A Lady of Distinction famous legal suit and a a Is recognized by the delicate, fasclnat· millions, forecd its way into lng influence of the perfume she uses. big story that has She loved A bath with Cuticura Soap and hot print at intervals for years. the end, to Duke Buchanan James water tq thoroughly cleanse the pores woman, "one-man" a of love the with followed by a dusting with Cuticura ago, days few A declared. Talcum powder usually means a clear, her friends they said she stood under the trees of tlweet, healthy sk.in.-Adver tlsemeut. Cent~al Park and saw him carried by, Fifth avenue, and tears streamdown "Nothing but Leave•" her face. Two days ago she down ed "What do ~·ou think of the trend ot learned that the man who gave away feminine fashions?" "I have just planted a fig orchard." fifty millions and had a hundred million left when he died had not even -New Haven Reg-ister. mentioned her in his will. She died of a heart trouble, for which she had been treated during recent years. Her physician denied that lack of nouri~hment was the caul'e of her collapse though it is admitted ~·he was found Your heels foodless aPd all but starving by one stay neat and of her music pupils recently. comforta ble VVashington --Six state governors and personal representati ves of eleven others demanded repeal of the fed eral inhe.itance tax before the houf.e ways and means committee. The federal government usurped the levying power of the state in this tax in a war crisis and has unjustly continued it since, the governors contend in their arguments for repeal. The delegation of seventf•en state executives was led by Governor Clifford VVa!ker, Democrat, Georgia, who presented a resolution adopted by a conference of Govcr;'lors at Savannah last June, asking 1·epeal of the federa! inheritance tax. "Our people are earnestly in sympathy with this petition, which asks• you to eliminate the inheritance clause when you write the r.ew tax bill,'' VValker told the committee. "It is admitted that this is the field of the eXiclusive jurisdiction. of the state. "The present law would not and could not have been vassed save as a wartime measure, and the time has now come for its repeal." Representati ves of other governors included Henry Cout·s, attorney, New Mexico; H. S. McCluskey, secretary to Governor Hunt of Arizona. The delegation claimed to have the sympathy of thirty-two state governors, and only four have opposed repeal C1f the tax, according to VValker. I •• as l~nq twicewi.6h THm-Pmi Thousands Killed In Persian Gulf Karachi, British India-Brief de· tails of the disaster caused by a cyclonic storm in the Persian gulf confirm the early reports of great loss of life and the destruction of many small vessels. Dispatches to the Daily Gazette say that 7000 persons perished in the cyclone, which was accompanied by an earthquake and other disturbances. The pearl fishing fleet was almost entirely swept out of existence, more than 200 boats being sunk. Briti~h naval vessels suffered minor dar..age, such as the loss of boats. Duke Will Is Probated New York-Bequ est of $10,000,000 to be administered by the Duke endowment was made in the will of the late James• B. Duke, tobacco magnate, in his will filed for probate at Som erville, N. J. The will, directed that $4,000,000 of the . $10,000,000 bequest should go for the construction and equipment of a medical school hospital and nurses' home at Duke university at Durham, N. C. The will does not reveal the total value of the Duke estate, which has been variously estimated at sums as high as $150 .000,000. The will gave Mrs. Nanaline H. Dukl' for life the Duke Fifth avenue prop erty, "Rough Point," at Newport, R. I., and Lynnewood, at Meyers Park, N. C. The same property goes to Mr. Duke's daughter, Doris, at the death of her mot!1er. The Duke Fanns company, a New Jersey corporation, was ordered dissolved and the funds realized to be distributed to the share holders. The executors of the Duke estate were given the proceeds of shares in the Duke Farms company owned by Mr. Duke. ~ Beet Sugar Prices Drop Denver, Colo.-A price cut of 50 cents per hundredweig ht on beet sugar at its factories has been announced by the Great Western S'llgar com)lany. The price reduction was made the company announceme nt said, with the Idea of "enlarging the sales territory of the organization ." Tb~ price cu.t wlll not afrect the 1925 basis of payment for the sugar beet crop of the farmers In the Rocky mountain and Middle VVestern territory, where the company operates, it was stated . New contracts and purchases and deliveries against unfilled contracts will be affected by the price cut, the company announceme nt said. Couple Marry After Mail Romance Nashua, N. H.-::-A trans-contin ental United Swat Rubber Company "mall romance" was disclosed here when Albert H. King, of St. Helena, ARE YOU GOING llt;N'riNO, CAMI'l!\10, touring, or stay ill&' a.t home? In any even1 Calif., was married to Mrs. Mary J. KOM-ET HUT-P •• C will prove Invaluable to you. KOM·E'l' H0'£·PAC l• a chemical heat ~ 71 years old. The couple had Wood, lng pa•l that repl&.ccs hot' water bot lleB and 1 lette>rs for nearly twelve exchanged STEAM FIRE, no Tt"Qulree other d~vlces. but or ELECTRICITY . Is ready tor Instant u,e King wrote to Mrs. Recently years. TJhorevE>r a tablespoon of water Is obtainable. ODORLESS, SANITARY, HAR:I.ILESS. Will her to c:ome to Califorasking Wood, 110:. rot or leak; can be carried any place nia and marry him. Sh~ obj()cted to Regular $2.60 value. To Introduce. $1.60 postpaid anywhct"e In U, S . Df"'a.lf'rs wanted going there. so King sold his propliOU·F.T MFG. CO~IPA~Y (JaUr. An!;"rle., .,. . 1 Bldg., 2Cl9 Han )<'~rnan<lo erty In St. Helena. cam o he"e and German Cabinet Lose Members took her as his bride. T~ ~y will live on a farm which 1\:l!;g has purchased members Natl0nalist Berlin.-The EffiCIENCY 01' SCHOOL of the German cabinet have resigned., ln Hollis, near he:·o. All commercial branches. Catalolf free. They are Herr Schiele, mini.t.er of SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH the Interior; Dr. Von Schl!eben, mineoN. Mala St. Religious Riot Causes Dea~h 1 !ster of finance, and Dr. Albert Neu- ) Me;dras, India.-'l'hre e person.1 have INFLAME D EYES injured induJ v.~ ur. Thumps.,n·s lll~ewat.er. p;irofi!l&~ haus, minister of economics. Neither 1 been killedt and ma·,y · afll 1 · · · . ~ 1W or ll&V. ng seven een PO C Jtn 2n, in a' not ' a cab met nor a parh'lmenta ry crJRIS · . Booklet. ruver, Tror, N.Y. Jl8lBuya.tyonrdrnfi'l Is expected to follow the r csignatif)n ter a religious procession in the vil- · - - - --- • the ministers. The situation In- \ lage of Uttungi, near Ball:lry. During of ~ -- __.. ......~~__E.!_ dicated that Chancellor Luther will the procession two factions of Ling· Learn b«rber trade. Catalogue tree. Dtplomao f"ll J•ued. Moler Barber Colle&'e, 114 Re~:ent ;,t. the var.ancies with nonpartisan lI aya t s, or men;. b era O•~ a caste, clash1 ministers, then appear before the rei- ; ed and the pollee Intervened. Some chstag for ratification of tl1e security /1.000 ~1llagers then attacked the popact and arbirtation treaties initiated · hce With ston,es and other misscls and the police replied with buckshot. at Locarno. NJC\lV SHOES MElLON READY TO \ AID 15 RUSHED L. D. S. Husiness College II Gen. Wood's Son Makes Stake Baby Crosses Ocean Alone York.--Brok e six months ago, New chll· youngest ·the London.-On e of 1 dren to cross the Atlantic alone ar- I Osborne Cutler Wood, son or and rh·ed at Liverpool on the liner Meg- fnrmer aid to Major General Leonard antic !rom Canada. He is Roland Wood, says that he has made $100,000 in Tamp'\ real estate. In New York . . i . W1ldash, 13 months old. H1s granrl- to buy some clothes, he Insists that mother took him to Canada recently, 1 the $11}(),000 is the first installment he his parents expecting to follow. His 'jls going to get back of nearly $1,000,mother waa unable to go, however, 000 which be mad., l.a Wall street and 1t was decided to send the baby i !!peculation and lost at the gaming back alone. Roland had a gpec!al tables of Athens, Cannes and DoauW. N. U., Salt L•ke elty, No. 44-·'1821 eabha and was 11hlpped In care o! the ville. He ia &oing Into Palm Beacb realty aoon. tlhlp'a matroa. I I I Lydia . -~~. Pi~kham~d~e!fib;:ff~~ ' ·. · · women. I have taken · ·· · four bottles of it and I f eel 100 per cent better. I was dizzy and weak with appetite, no ambition and with a tired feel· ing all the time. I baa aches and pain all over my body had the headache a good deal. I saw ~,.;,;;=;;,;;=,_,.;o;.;:~;J_your advertisemen t in the 'Pittsburgh Press' and thought it might help me. I have been greatly benefited by its use a.nd highly recoiii!' mend it for all ailments of women." .:l Mrs. J. H. PROCTER, Box 1, East Liberty Station, Pittsburg, Pa. Such letters prove the great merit of the Vegetable Compound. These women know by experience the benefit they bave received. Their letters show a sincere desire to help other women saffering from like ailments. Let these experiences help you-now. In a recent canvass of women purchasers, 98 out of every 100 report b eficial results by taking Lydia E. P'.nkham's Vegetable Compound. Sold by dru~rgists everywhere. •o an• tl1is concerning China's aspirations shortly ·wer;; crystalized conference after the delegates convened, in a ~weeping list of prop sals set forth , by Dr. C. T. \~'a:1g, for:rer premier and foreign mi ~.i:;ler. The Chinese former minis ter, Shen Jui -Lin, acting at C'hairman, madf' an opening address which Dr. Wang supplemente d at Mr. Shen's request, propol'ing the foilow· ing points as n basi:J for discussion: DE· STATE BY ACTION 1. That the powers agree to the PRESENTS NEW PROPOSAL S TO PROMPT RESULT AS PARTMENT TAKEN removal of tariff restrictions conHOUSE COMMITTE E BUT HE OF SYRIAN TRIBES REVOLT I tained in their cxi st:ng treaties with HOLDS TO EXEMPTION S China. This \Vould be equivalent to the 1 restoration of tariff autonomy. 2. That China abolish the likin Change Would Mean One Per Cent American Destroyers Will Remain In And on interprovin~ial trad~) siLives (taxes Protect To Rec:diness On First Five Hundred Dollars y with the enforcement CitiAmerican multaneousl Of Property Dries right up! With Five Per Cent As Max. tariff law, which national Necessary If China's zens of imum Tax If you just realized how ~asy lt Ia m would take effect not later than Janstop fiery, itching, burning eczema by · 1 {Th' 1 1g.,n aw was simply building up the red-blood-cel ls IS tanff -"· uary • In your blood with S. s. s., Y'lll apparently 24, October promulgated de· Washington -Two American VVashington --A new schedule of waste another minute trying; wouldn't for basis a as us·e its to view a with 1 ordered from Gibnormal income notes has been pre- stroyers have been other way, any It do to conference.) this in ralter to Alexandria, Egypt, to re- negotiations f<ented to the house ways and means only way to relieve irrf• the That's er.!orcethe to 3. That previous main in readiness there for use in tated, broken out skin of any sort. You committee by Secretary Mellon. ·ment of the national tariff law an lack rich, red blood. Impurities are ln. The proposal suggested {l rate of Syrian ports should their pres-ence for the protection J interim tax of 5 per cent be levied on your system. The blood is so weak it 1 per cent on the first $3000 of tax- become necessary of American lives and property as a ordinacy good.':!; a 30 per cent tax on can't fight back and overcome the enable incomes, 2 per cent on the next result of the revolt by tribesmen in "grade A'· luxuries, including wines emy, eo the impurities break out. $1000, 3 per cent on the next $4000 that country. and toba.eco, and a 20 per cent tax on through the skin. the blood backS. S. S. bu:llls . · d B'' 1 " and 5 per cent thereafter. these in addibon builds millions of new red-blood-ce lls. uxur1es, e gra AdVice cabled were Instructions This arrangemen t, the secretary mira! Roger VVells, commanding . the to :he present ad valorem 5 per cent Eczema dries right up. Boils, pimples; said in a letter to Chairman Green, blackheads, ugly blotches and irritat• European squadron after a request tariff. 1 probably would be more satisfactory 4. That the co lie , iort of th~se in- ing rashes all disappear. for the ships had been received here than the recently submitted treaset S. S. S. AJI months from d ~le~rtup Y1°1 ~rt skThm. G from Paul K.nabenshue , American terim taxes fbegin three e 1arger bottle 18.., ruggis s sc 1 . . th d ury schedule suggestion, 1 per cent S · · B · e ate o the s1gnatur e of the more economical. 1 m enut, yna. on the first $3000 taxable income, 3 consu State department officials are agreement reached by thi ~· conference. per cent on the next $4JOO and 5 per Safety First 5. That dedsions relative to the hopeful that it will not be necessary ~ent thereafter. efinto carried be articles four above They were as busy a,; hees )lt the the ships from Alexandria, Present nonnal rates are 2 per to move of signature of date the do"·ntown re~taurant. A port!~· woman but in any emergency they will be feet from cent on the first $4000 of income, 4 visitor hurriedly ap;>row.:hed the l;ervwithin quick sailing distance of the agreement. per cent on the next $4000 and 6 per The Chinese national tariff law re- lng eount er and denHlllded of ,, the . . Syrian ports. cent on the remainder, Advances concermng the Syrian ferred to in these proposals provides startled walter: Mr. Mellon submitted the new fig""'be1·e is the kltchPn? I want to di~turbances s·how that it centers in taxes on imports ranging between but proposal, "definite" a as before not ures A high 7Yz per cent and 40 per cent ad val- ~ee how the meats are preparerl Damascus. of vicinity the belaid as an alternative plan to that l orem, except on wines and tobacco, I order mine."-lndla napolis News. writing. mountain range separates Damastore the committee in cus and the Mediterrane an coast and for which the proposed charges ran"'e It really is the third tentative As It Were reason it is believed the re- between 50 and 90 per cent. The Ia;, :>utline of rates• the treasury has sub- for thi~ "ltud~·. 11'11 me, clo yon get any rent volt Will not spread to the costal ab•o provides for a reciproc:al discrim:nitted, Mr. Mellon having submitted ont of kis~ing?" plensure to threaten American life or inatory and prohibitory tariff. ?rally when he appeared before the regions Je,.:~. ns the fnce mny he." or "l\Iore I property. Committee that the rate might be Actress Must Pay Big Sum It is estimated that about 150 made 1 :~ per cent on the first $4000, Mineola, L. I.--Opening ot a sealed 3 per cent between $4000 and $8000 Americans are in Damascus or the immedi:J.te vicinity. The majority of verdict in supreme court here showMother of nine convinced. Ono and 5 per cent for all over $8000. the jury which heard the trial that ed than more the of as well as dose of Beecham's Pill~; are the these, Mr. Mellon's letter reached the $100,000 remedy for sick heac:iaches and Frey's M. Katherine Mrs. of i~ the L~bcommittee just as it was beginning its 1000 Amer.ic~n n~tional~ . constipation alienfor nennett Wilda .e d1stnct, wluch suit against fourth day of hearings on tax revis- ~non. adaumstratn> "Your pills certainly have done 'Wonder.. 1 ation of affections, had found in fathe mount!lim: between Damfor me . I am thirty--eight yean of age. beeD ion, with a long list of witnesses on hes m married thirteen yean and am the mofbet of vor of the plaintiff, who was awarded naturalized are coast, the and asc~s innine children. hand to S'Ubmit their views on the returned was verdict The $37,500. United th~. in been have who Tynans u 1 waa suffering from headache• and coo.sdoo come and various other levies. The patlon for nearly fi.tteen years whtn I hap. and returned to their native J after the jurors had deliberated but States letter follows: p~ned to nad one of )'0\.lt 'a.ds" in the pr.~r. acFrey Mrs. minutes. thirty-eight I country an~ who have registered with Ha.ving a headache that day I went to the comyour before "In my statement druggist and bought a box of Beecham'• the Amencan consulates, insuring cused the actress of alienatin" the atPille. I took a dose. That dose was • 'life• mittee on October 19, I said: man t~rf Frey, Charles fections of themselves American protection. lAver• to me. Since rhen I have had no mote h(:adach.c•, and my heJJ.Ich is sood. I recom.o " 'The treasury does not propose and former Kentucky bookmaker. mend them tCJ whomever 1 meet." any definite rate, but it presents to Miss Bennett and Frey both denied Guggenheim Backs Aviation Mrs. H. 4 Vigne, Jcr~cy City, N. ]. you the certainty that tax reform comedy musical the PILLS a.,e "life Jaw:rs" t~ aD claiming this, BEECHAM'S New York-The school of aeronau· sutfenn~ from con.n iP!ltion, biliousncJJ, sic;..... can go to a 25 per cent maximum and marwas he th::1t unaware was headacha, and uthtr d1~csci.,ae ai!mmu. York university has been star surtax without the slightest danger to tics of New suit. the of notified until ried SAMPLE-Wri te today for free IIUDple PREE . dedicated "to the progress of mantn B. J', Allen Co., .. 17 Canal St., New York our future revenues.' '' k_i"nd" by Daniel G~1gg'-,nheim, finan-l Buv from your druaglot in 25 and SOe boue Insanity Pleads Slayer a with recently It founded who Cl_er, for <:lJttter Health, q'akt Divers Find Sixth Bcdy Denver, Colo.-Attorney~ for Ray New London, Conn.-The sixth g-Ift of $ 500,000 in honor of his Ron, i body has been recovered from the Harry p: Guggenheim , a naval avi- Shank, ~elf - confessed slayer of hi> wreckage ot the S-51, sunk off Block ator durmg the war. The younger -.v:ife and son, who wa.s sentenced in island by the City of Rome, Septem-1 'fr. Gug?enheim is vice chairman on district court here to pay the extreme ber 25, and taken by the Pequot to the advisory committee, which is '1 penalty for his crime will institute the naval hlspital at Newport for headed by Orville -yvright. "If I were insanity proceedings i~ an attempt to identificatio n. The body w[s found a young ma.n seekmg a career of sci- \ save their cJ;ent from the noo!';e This by d.ive'rs under ~he turn of the hull, en~e ~r co~merc:,'' Mr. Gugegnheim was announced by Charles Gln~berg, leadmg to the conclusion that the s'ald m his _ded~catory address, "1 chief conRel for f:hank, who pleaded sailor was caught in the rigging oJ.nd w:oul,~ unhestltatm gly turn to avia- ' insanity at the trial. oil bas been a world- I I ! - =======~~ -::.:====~~=~:::=~~===;:======= I c Peking-Chi na opened the Chinese cor.ference here with a propo~al that the powers restore to her 1 complete tariff autonomy and agree to 1 the enforcement of a Chine~·~ national ~ustoms law beginning not later than January 1, 1929. I customs Pa.-" 1 recommen CUT INGOi~E RATES TO U.S. CITIZENS li I I I Woman 's Life Saver Beech am's Pills FOR OVE R zoo YEA I\S I ~~~~~d to the bottom when the S-51 Rum Ship Is Towed Back San I1'rancisco.- The British rum . Q · h s 1p uaitchou:m, seized off the Far· allon islands and towed into port here by a coast guard cutter will be towed b~ ck to the point. of seizure . and re· lensed with ap;)lo.;ies, it developed a It was t r<W hours after the seizure. discovered that the liquor vessel had il een illegally seized at a point ut l<>ast fifteen miles past the twelve· mile zone. - - - -- -A5bestos King Dead New Yurk.-'l'hom as I·'. 1 r:mville, "asbestos king," whose fortune has been estimated to exceerl $ ' 0 000.000 is dead. An att:~ck of heart disease proved fatal in his apartment at the Hotel Plaza, where he had lived t•Jr the last three years. H~i! was 63 years old. haarlem wide remedy for kidney, liver and bladder disorders, rheUll'Ilatism, lwnbago and uric acid conqitions. Music Composer Dies I; L hon.Lon II d H . as and Boom g s an edenck Stevenson, Angeles.-Fr Los . boom or Long N ew y or 1L -A' qmet . and known composer widely . Isla n d proper t y .mvo 1vmg · ofatchoral · dwd purchases Instrumenta l mus1c the home . . . . and Improvemen ts said to represent an outlay of $ 20,0()0,000 was revealed 1 of hts sore A ~attve of England. Mr. stud1ed .harmony at CamI't 'Vas ,.hen · . announce d tl1at the Stevenson •' ,, Phipps estate has bought 3000 acres ' bndge. After commg to the Umte_d of Surfolk county land at the eastern 1 States he was precentor of St ..Johns ond ol the island for develo ment ur· i cathedral, JX>m·er, and later <hrector P 1 or the Denver Conservator y or 1\Iuslc. P roses. 1 He came to Los Angeles In 1894. r-~oltD M~1 ~ ~ HAARLEM OIL ' crorrect internal troubles, stimulate vital organs. Three sizes. All druggists. Insist on the original genuine GoLD MEDAL. Woman Fails In Race For Mayor !I Cap t urer of Ban d'' •• Dl es Cl' eyenne, \Vyo.-Chey enn c 's first LaramiP, \Vyo.-~George Bacus, llv· woman ,-:mdid:lte for mayor failed to n!':tr here, v.ho in 1!116, captured i:ng townswo·l her of succe;~ the l achieve W. L. "P.ill" Carlisle, singlehanded wa.: who man, Nellie Tayloe Ross, mall robb r·r, now serv- · Pacific 1 Union · e ected g-overnor by the voters of Wy- 1 in the state peniteurm te life oming a year ago by a big majority. ' ing a Elizabeth Brown, candidate for nom· tiary, died here of injuries ref' ei".•eri ir.ation in the municipal mayorality when struck by an automobile. Bar.m1 primary, receive<! but 33 votes of the was walking beside a hay wagon 1 when struck by the machine. 3500 cast. I Winning Pototer Goes To Canada Efforts To Anne~y Princess Fall Charges Found To Be Unfounded Chlca~o.- Thfl w!nnln15 !)O'lter in a Stuttgart, Germany.-E fforts by reWaRhington .-Charges flied a?;alnst contest for religious advertising post· Major General William H. Hart, by publican guarrls to begin proceedings ers for billbroard use W•lS n•1nouncoo Major General Harry r•. RogPrs, re· against Princess Hermine, wife of at the annual Ch'ca~o church federatired, haTe disclosed to the lnvestigat-, !ormer I:mperor \Villiam, for alleged tion conference on publicity. It is tng officer no basis for further pro- unlawful ul.!urpation o! the title "Kais· the work of J. Sydney Hallam of ceedings. The charges tiled witb. the erin Hermine" have tailed. An at· Toronto, Ont., and depicts the figure war department alleged that General tempt to lod~e n criminal complaint of Christ pointing to a r:athoddral with Hart cav.sed the publication of mag- against her under paragraph 360 of two scriptural quotations beneath: azine an-I nowspapllr articles deroga- the penal code was made In Nurn· "Rlght~usness exhalteh the nation," tory to General Rogers for the pur· burg, but the court there fl"ssod the another court, nnd "Come unto rue and I wlll give !"OSO or pr<>vancing the latter's reap. allegations along to :160 contest· pointment as quart&rmast er general. which declined to present the chargt you rest." Entries fro111 ants were e-xhl.blted. ~era! Hart BJZC'Oeilded to that poat. to the dltrtrict attorne,r. I ------ -1 1 I 1 : 1 I Cutic ura Talcum Unadulterated Exquisitely Scented |