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Show THB JORDAN JOURNAL. MIDY TROOPS JIATROL STREETS OF NEWPORT FOLLOWING DIS. ASTEROUS BLAZE. MUSSOLINI NOW RESPONSIBLI FOR WORK FORMERLY· PER· FORMED BY FRANCE HIGH GRADE RAIL AND INDU8DUSTRIAL STOCKS FIND BACKING STRONG IS REPORT 8everal Persona Suffer Injuries; Loaa Estimated At $1,000,000.00; Fire Fighters From Other Cltlea sent To Soene. Germany Defeated In Plan To Regai11 Loa~ Area; All Boundaries Hold; Purpose Ia Considered To Be Very_Pialn Huge Volume At Start Of Market; Theory Advanced That 1. c. C. Decision May Have Been Tipped By Someone Newport. Ark.-Members of the Arkansas national guard patrolled Newport following the disasterous flre whic.h destroyed 268 homes and razed twenty-nine residences and bu.Uness blocks. More than 1000 persons, made homeless by the connagratlon, were being cared tor by Red Cross workers. Several persons suffered burns and Mary Johnson, 90, negro ex-slave, was perhaps fatally burned. Fire departments from surrounding towns were ruslied here to fight the fire, which got out of control after it started in a lumber yard. Loss is estimated at nearly $1,000,000. With troops patrolling the streets, inhabitants of this llttlle river town were !¥laking preparations to rebuild more than 200 homes destroyed by the disastrous fire which swept twenty blocks of residences. While not un· der martial law, the city was being policed by national guardsmen to prevent looting. With the 100 tents, 500 cots and 1000 army 'blankets which arrived here from Little Rock, temporary quarters were bein:g arranged tor those made homeless. Last night the homeless were sheltered in charches, schools and homes not deetroyed. Mayor E. h Boyce's relief committee was surveying the situation and Mr. Boyce said it would be de· cideil later In the day what help was needed. Paris.-At the precise moment when Europe is assembling at Geneva to complete the final phase of LQcarno and bring Germany baek into European fields, an equal and dpmtnant fact is that Mussolini in biB recent speeches and inteniews :had already revised the Locarno pact inslllf, transformed the whole situation a11d given his country a role more important and prominent than It baa ever occupied in modern times. Locarno was a British CO'lceptlon which found easy German official agreement and rather less immediate French approval. It gained immediate strength with all elements in Britain, but was and remains unpopular In Many French and Germany quarters. In essence, It represented a British conviction that peace In Europe was not attainable without Franco-German adjustment, that no such adjustment was possible while France feared Germany, nor If any exclusive Franco• BriUah ebtente were made. Ac~rdingly, Britain guaranteed existing frontiers In the west, both Ger· man and French; brought both to &() cept these frontiers as permanent, and persuaded both to agree to German entrance Into the league. For France, the bragain meant a British guarantee of French possession ot AlsacsLorraine, tor Germany, the present end of danger of new occupations of the Rhinelaad because of treaty tailurea, and ultimate freedom to revise eastern frontiers-that is, to reclaim Danfing, the Polish corridor and Upper Silesla, to realize union with Austria. Eastern eventualities have disquieted France, alarmed Poland and Czecho-Slovakia, and led to the Inclusion in the Locarno pacta of an agreement that Germany should not seek by force to remake the eastern boundarl8s. But this only occentuated the Germany. purposes to seek through the machln· ery of the league of nations to obtalll a revision of the treaty of Versallles. This was the main argument offered by the German cabinet tor German en· trance. TINTIC SHOWS BIG EARNINGS Revealed By Tax Valuation Report Aa Ranking Next To Utah Copper ~Crttlc ,(kl,ftlly)--Y4!11, I'm going the theater dlrpartment tefunded t&xpafers -during the ~at It kept more than Salt Lake .C ity.-The Tintic Stand· ard Mininc company earned $2.74 a share net on is 1,152,915 shares of capItal stock outstanding, according to the report filed with the state board of equalization covering the 1925 operations. The report was submitted for taxation purposes and fixes a value of $9,793,886.53 for taxable purposes. The report shows net earnings, af· ter all deductions, of $3,158,167.15, the largest of any mining company that has filed Its statement so far with TRAINING CAMP LIMITS DEFINED the board of equalization with the single exception of the Utah Copper campany. The report shows that the Citizen Soldiers of Utah, Wyoming, Nevada and Idaho Attend Here gross yield of the Tintic Standard Mining companr was $7,319,978.08 for 1925. Salt Lake ctty.-The 1926 citizens The mine produced 1U,481.98 tons military training camp at Fort Dougot ore, from which was obtained the las, June 19 to July 18, wtll be open following metals: Gold, 5853.56 oun- to citizen soldiers In Utah, Wyoming, ces; silver, 4,200,14.2.73 ounces; lead Nevada and all of Idaho with the ex46,863,046.73 l'Ounds; . copper, 1,001,- ception of the ten northern ·counties, 796.20 pounds. It is announced In pamphlet issued by The total deductions for the year the ninth corps area, United States osmounted to -$4,161,810.93. The cost army. Attendance at the Salt Lake ot extractiqn was $1,525,263.67 and the C. M. T. C. this summer is expected coot of reduction or smelting charges to equal or exceed that of 1925. Transportation S1,515,863.70. was Courses of instruction at the 1928 charges were $854,441.77 and con- camp will Include the basic and the struction and reliS-irs are placed at red, white and blue courses. The $266,2~.79. basic course, with age limit of 17 to The report states that the statement 24, for men without previous military also includes the Iron Blossom Con- training provides preliminary mlHtary solidated Mining company from May training, Including physical develop5, 1925, up to the close of the year. ment, athletics, school of the soldier, The Tintic Standard purchased thia squad and company drill, rifle marks· company outright for $350,000 on May manship, first aid> camp sanitation, 5 of last year. personal hygleae, military courtesy, meaning of discipline, studiei in' citiUtah Products Find Market• zenship. The red course, for grad· Salt Lake CJty.-Three ~sons of uates of a basic camp between the , co-poeratlve .marketing of fruits and ages of 17 and !5, provtdea training vegetables in Utah has demonstrated in infantry, cavalry, field artillery and to producers of these products that coast artillery. Graduates of the red their marketing problems are now course are eligible on a recommend&· solved, at least as far as finding a tlon for the white course, which promarket for their products, according vides advanced training, whil_, the to L. R. Hart, sales manager of the blue course Is for warrant officers, Federated Fruit & Vegetable Grow· enlisted men or selected civilians who ers, which represents the Utah Fruit are physicaly fitted for commissions &: Vegteable Growers• association and In the otfi :-er's reserve corps. other co-operatives in Utah. "Through ()(H)perattve D¥U"keting," 1\fr. Hart Farm Supplies Plan Revlaed ~ts out. "the growers have been Washnigton.-A revised program a'&le to see the necessity of better designed to solve the farm surplus grad~ and qualit1 11roblem was submitted to the house agricultural committee by the group Battle Ground To Be Park of middle western agricultural leaders HarUqen. 'feJt,.-The historic Resa· who came to Washington to advocatA ea We Las Palmas battleground near the principles of the Dickinson blll Bro1111JST1lle. IIC6ne of the first battle The farm leaders' suggestions were of the ~ "tlV~ the United States made at the request of the commlttea and Mexlc() ID 18'", wut be set aside and were intedned to meet strong obas a mWU)J'Y pe,rk. ;r, C. Fernandez, jctions which have been raffled in exeScott, real cutive and legislative quarters to proC}<Lude MIN'Wn tu~d J, (!State meu of Brownsville and own- visions ·in the Dickinson bill assessers of the site of two acres, have do- ing an equalization fee against pronated it to the Valley Historical so- ducers to provide a fund to offset lossciety for use as a par:It. es on crop surplusses sold abrood. Cleveland, Ohlo.-A rehearing will be sought on the applicati0n to the in! terstate commerce commission for railroads in the Van 1 merger of five Sweringen plan, It was in:.licated by Colonel W. A. Colston, gene ral coun· I sel of the Nickel Plate rallroat!. I Colston conferred with 0. P. and M. J. Van Sweringen and John J. Berney, president of the road, shortly after Colston's arrival from Washington. I I The St. Patrick's Day parade In New York last year waa the biggest event of lb kind In history.· Twenty.ftve thousand marcher-a pa. raded down Fifth avenue. The photo shows aome of the hundreda of boys costumed aa Gaelic warriors who added a picturesque touch to the parade. Saint P. K. " NEW HANDY PACK Fits handpocket and purse More for your money an4 the best Pepperminta.ewinzSweet for any money Look for Wrigley's P. It Handy Pack 1 on your Dealer's Counter ~~~ • ., • New One A lU'W excu~;e for the busy office man has been Invented. Instead of replying, "He's In conference," a young indy secretary In Wall street coined a new "turn-away" phrase, "He's In a temper."-Tbe Outlook. Day Some people are so unfortunate as to have gained their flrst Impressions of St. Patrick from the rollicking old song which beai'S his name: I was one of them, but I received a new light on St. Patrick from one of whose ancestral country he was the patron saint, and now, whenever a flippant thought of the good saint comes to mind, there comes also a picture or the reverential face of a little Irish woman who kept a shop In an old Missouri town, a pleasant shop with a ftower garden to the rear. On a certain spring day when the elm trees In' the courthouse yard across from the shop had begun "a· wearin' o' the green," and the shop windows were decorated with shamrocks, some young people entered the shop seeking favors and games for a St. Patrick's day party. Tliey especially desired a comic head of St. Patrick, the sort that hu a wide-open mouth, · Into which blindfolded players attempt to toss potatoes. They found no such pictures in that shop, and after the other customers had left the proprietor said to me, with a sweet t(Jne of tolerance softening the indignation that was mirrored on her face: "Those girls are merely thoughtless. They do not reallze their irreverence. But suppose a~meone should plan a party tor Washington•• birthday and shoUld have a caricatnre of our great liberator and throw cherries Into the mouth. Think what an uproar of con. demnatlon there would be I It Is a rreat deed to '"bring civil liberty to a country, and likewise It Is great, 811 Bt. Patrick did, to strike the shackles of paganlim from the souls of a people and causl! the truths of (.,'hristlanlty to sblne upon them." Then for me was stripped from St. Patrick's name aH the impossible stories with which tradition has clustered It, and ·st. Patrick the man, human and kindly, brave and gallant, a missionary of the very first order, stood out to vlew.-B. E.. P., ln the Kansas City Star. • tf!. All ye who love the springtime-and who but loves It well 1 When the little birds do sine. and the buds begin to swell Think not ye ken Its beauty, or know Its race 80 dear, Till ye look upon old Ireland In the dawning of the year. For 'tl• green, green, green, where the rtllned towers are gray, And It's green, green, green, all the happy night and day; Green or leaf and green or sod, green of tvy on the wall, And the blessed Irish •hamrock wtth the fairest green of alii IN IRELAND ~-~ Today in old ·ireland the shamrocks are blooming, And primroses peep from the banks of each stream, And each field like a carpet of _emerald brightness Glistens with dewdrops beneath the sun's beam. Afton, Wyo.-The honey bee Indus· try Is one of the coming new industries of Star Valley. Dr George W. West and County Agent Archie A. Egbert have been carrying on expert· ments with bees the past two seasons and have demonstrated that Star val· ley furnishes enough honey-giving blossoms to supply. the crop. Specially prepared crates or bee houses are needed to protect the hives In winter. Large Damage In Mail Hangar Blaze Cheyenne, Wyo.-Four m;tll airplanes and a hangar were destroyed by fire on the airmail field here with an estimated damage of $70,000. A mechanic, Sam Weller, who was In the hangar wh~n the fire started Is In the hospital in a serious condition from burns Passaic, N. J.-Undaunted by the clubbing methods of the Passaic and Clifton police, Rtrike leaders ordered further mass picketing by textile workers. "Und<-r the mask of law, pollee have Instituted a reign of terror," commented Albert Weisbord, twentylive year old leader of the strikers, "but we haven't been whipped yet." Utah Solona Asked To Support Bill Thday in old Ireland the glory of springtime Is filling the land with its radiant glow, While over the world sad hearts ache with longing For a glimpse of the scenes that they knew long ago. -Kathariu ~" c& ltlt, w--. ~ Ualoa,) Artificial Textiles The artlflclal silk an•l wool macletrom cellulose or wood flher are the only textile mate.-Ials that man halt added to those provided hy nature. His cotton grows on bushes, t he silkworm spins his silk, the flnx pl ant pro,·ides his linen, anrl the sheep and other animals his wool. Price, Utah.-Messages have been sent to Utah's congressional delegation at Washington urging it to give full support to the passage of the Gooding long and short haul bill- now before congress. This action was tak· en at a meeting of the Price Chamber of Commerce. The passage of house bill No. 3991, which will prohibit the sending of unsolicited merchandise through the mail, was favored Jn a "esolutlen passed by the chamber. ; Nature's own. body builder •'law pulled dorhrt through indigestioa and loss of appetlu. What I ate coruetl serJn'e pains and fll:l sleep was restless. "Since talti11g Tall• lac my appdite anti digestion an fine; I s/ee/J sou11d t111tl Star Valley Entering !;lee Industry Strlkera Defy Passaic Police Event Marka Birthday Of Phone I I WRIGLEYS Patrick's,~ Wa~hington. I New York.-A whirlwind rally broke the force of one of the most crushing waves of liquidation In stock market prices. Strong support was rushed to the aid of many stocl{S, staggering under a week's relentless hammering by bear traders, and prices quickly rebounded one to almost twenty-four points with an enthusiastic outburst of buying at the close. With the eqilibrlum of the stock evch~tnge restor· t>d, trading proceeded at a more normal pace, total sales approximating 2,500,000 shares, compared with Wednesday's record breaking volume of 3,785,700. New York.-The reactionary move· ment In stock prices, which continued uninterruptedly for over a week and 'las reduced the quoted value of se· curlties by over $1,000,000,000, was checked, at least temporarily, when strong banking support was provided for a long list of high grade railroad and industrial shares. A rally of one to seven points followed the initial outburst of buying, with trading again in enormous volume. One hopeful sign seen by stock In England, on old-time calendars, market observers was the fact that March 17 was distinguished for a rea· large blocks of stock were no longer son other than Its association with pressed fer sale, regardless of bids, St. Patrick. It was noted as the date and that practically all the large inon which Noah entered the ark, along dividual transactions were on the side with his wife, his sons, Shem, Ham of rising prices. The increasing num· · and Japheth, and their wives, for a ber of small lots of 100 and 200 shares stay of ·?ne year and ten days wblle representing the purchases of what the wate1·s prevailed upon the face Wall street regards as "bargain huntot the earth In the greatest deluge the ers," also helped to restore confidence world has ever known. in the market. According to old English ballad maken~, Father Noah was ¥ery glad BREAK HOLDS ON EXCHANGE when the ftood was over, for he had become very tired of being housed In such close quarters with so many ani- Another Day of Dramatic Saks In Pri· mals, birds, reptiles and Insects, and ces wrth Liquldatoins Recorded besides, according to the balladlsts, Mrs. Noah had added to the unpleasNew York.-Another dramatic break antness by giving way to her shrewish prices In which all existing records in temper. But In justice to Mrs. Noah the volume and breadth of trading for It lnust be remembered that the early were broken took place in the New ballad makers were men. York stock exchange. Net declines In the active issues ranged from 1 to ~ Legendary history bears out the 33 points, with the stocks of railroad words of the old song that "Saint Pat- shares Identified with the pending rick was a gentleman and came of de- merger plans bearing the brunt of the cent people." His father wa,s a high selling attacks, due to the interstate class Roman officer living in Scotland. commerce c!immission's trejection of Patrick, or Succat, as hil!l parents the proposed "Nickle Plate" consoll· called him, was born at Kilpatrick, dation. Total sales as compiled by As· near Dumbarton, In 387. When fifteen sociated Press tabulators with 3,785,years old be was captured by pirates 700 shares, as compared with 3,015,· and carried to Ireland, where he 700 the day .before and 3,340,600 in the served as a herdsman. His capton;, previous record-breaking session of named him Patrick, wliich comes from November 10, 1925. The number of the Latin Pitrlclus, "the younc patri· industries dealt In was 653, as comclan," or "of noble birth." pared with the previous high of 625 last Tuesday. established 1!~11! . New York ctty.-New York and -;president Coolidge held their first telephone conLondon appro-J peace-time lar,fest signed the the fiftieth anniversary of versatlon, pristion bllt In history-the annual s~pply measure for the treasury and 1 the 41ay Alexander Graham Bell obI post office departments, carrying tained the original patent tor the In· $868,281,501. 'l."he bill was the first Of 1 strument. As part of th4 program, .a the rea;r~ a~l'Opriatlon measures to 1 news dispatch was telephoned from reach the White House. Of its total London to the Asaoelated Press, tn $718,805,30:4 is to meet post office de- New York, tbe first news story ever partment exp~mses durtng the fiscal th1ls to be transmitted &er68s the 76&1' beldn•I•K .July 1. This is more ocean. ACI'ou more than 3500 milea 0.. u~ooe.ooo Ja 8Xcelll of the Jut d land and lea, -voices in London 1eame clearlr to llateaera In Mew York. rear'• -»Jl'Vllri&tlon. lit I :a. President Signa Supply , Measure • ... UTAH feei/Ju." F. N. Vanu, 622 3rd St., Burlington, IOWG. Tanlac is Nature's greatest tonic Made from roots, and builder. barks and herbs after the Tanlac formula, It revi t nl!zeil tl1e blood, Iones up the dlgesth·e organs and JlUts the whole system In fighting trim. Don't go about your work sickly Take the exand discouraged. ample of millions who have been lJeiped by Tnnlac. Stop at your orug-gist's today al)d get this wonderful tonic. You'll be surprlsed how quickly you Improve. For constipation take Tanlac Vegetable PUis. (IJ~~!~,G.:~~<!.R~! lion and 1tarts ~~~ healing if you ~ Resinol Green's August Flower /ot Constipation, lndlcestion aad Torpid Liver Reliev'ts that ~lng of having eaten unwisely. 30c an'! 90c bottles. AT ALL DRUGGISTS. • W. N. U., Salt Lak• City, No. 11-1121. |