OCR Text |
Show THE OGDEN JAPl ST WOE SELECTS LOVE 10. Vice AUiuiiai director of the naval staff college, has been Informally selected this by the JaDanese navy to head concountry's naval delegation to theEastference on disarmament and Far ern questions to be' held in Washing--tonBays the newspaper Nichi Nichi. , He is to be accompanied to the UnitedKimiiStatsa v4k s?, If let uiM Yir J Pdntolna vwjJ'''"" six other and nahysi, Vyedasa, Nagao officers. HARDING AIMS ENDORSED. The League of Nations associationOf Japan has adopted resolutions supx uiuiyirs pui ling ino Harding in calling the disarmament conference. "The practical realization of the re- duction of armaments," the resolu- tlons stated, "will be extremely difficult ao long as a great power like the United States remains outside of the proleague of nations. The American conposal looking to an international ference is, therefore, particularly gratifying, as it undoubtedly is a step forward in the right direction. SELECTION OF QUESTIONS. "This association earnestly desires the establishment bf as complete an understanding as possible among the powers concerned regarding the problems of the Pacific and the Far East which may come up for deliberation at Washington together with the question of armaments. In its opinion, the utmost care should be taken in the selection of questions to be discussed, so that no matter already disposed of compacts should be 'by international submitted to consideration at the conference." HUGHES HEADS PARTY. WASHINGTON, Aug. 13. Any exthat President Harding will pectation himself act as a delegate to the dis-- armament conference was overthrown Friday by a White House announce-TTethat he had definitely designated Hughes of the state departSecretary ment to head the American delegation. were It was said that other members presi-i'deto be the chosen, although yet is known to have narrowed conthe list of those he considers siderably available and may reach the point of r'other definite selections in the near filature. He Is understood to have deat least one of the places cided that shall go to a United States senator and choice of J woman as a member of " the delegation still is within the range 7 of possibility. STAYS IN BACKGROUND. ; The exact role to be played by the .'president never has been officially de-is ' fined but the general expectation that after delivering the opening of the conference November 11. remain In the background of will ,he "the negotiations, leaving direct con-tawith the foreign commissioners to llis accredited representatives, but at "'the same time keeping in close touch with them and with all the proceedings of the conference. By this course Mr. Harding will be in a position similar to that of President Poincare of France, when he opened the Versailles conference and "then retired from actual participationproceedings. President Hard;in theclose advisers are said to feel ing's .'"that by keeping away from details of the disarmament discussions he can reserve his efforts for the more important features and be so place! as to act as mediator for all the delegation XJn any disagreement that might threaten the success of the conference. QUESTION OF HOUSING. ' Not only has the president placed. . Mr. Hughes at the head of the Ameri-,can delegates, but he also has turned over to the state department the task of clearing away all the details re-,- " mainlng to be disposed of before the conference meets. One of the problems which threaten to occupy the attention of a large staff before it Is solved, was tackled ' by the department when it offered, its aid to the embassies and legations of the invited nations in securing suitable -quarters and other accommodations for the visiting delegations. Each of the powers is expected to send a large corps of experts, clerks and other attaches with its commission and the task of providing them, not only a place to live but office space as well may require an extensive survey of housing facilities. SCOPE OF DISCUSSION. While replies were awaited to the .formal invitations dispatched Thursday, speculation in diplomatic circles here chiefly with the scope which may be taken by the conference under the terms laid down by the invitations. The most lively topic of discussion was the statement in the text of the invitations that there should be consideration of "matters which have been and are of interna& tional concern." . J:' In the absence of any interpretation by the state department, diploma-tlst- k were not inclined to that - the American government predict would seek to include incidents diplomatically closed as among those which might properly come before the conference. w r : . , nt nt e 1 i rt . ct . - t , -- ive YW exi-mptio- an-u- al i i ' 1 Tr""' J ALHAMBRA TOMORROW B0F U. S FILLED GEORGIA It - j i Aug. 13. WASHINGTON. l r- An over- Come Join the Crowd en BI-STR- J t- - fill" OY itzzlk. Tooi lit at p3H W fa ffOMlVI n mmmw OG DEN'S FINEST1 RESORT Hie SrPS FAST IN THE WORLD WSJTCH FOR THE OGOEN THEATRE M Mui ic by the greatest orchestra In the west double piano feature laughing trombone and marvelous saxaphonci. No gambling no profiteering. Admission 30c. Drinks 5c. No car fare. Autos parked free. Dancing every Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday nights. 8:45 until 12 p. m. Prices: $1.00 and tax; Box Seats, $1.50 and tax; Children, Half Price. 14 SPECTACULAR VAUDEVILLE ACTS - i torn-dow- d vice.-nreside- nt j j . - ! - nr-.-m- i . -- PHILIPPINE half-hearte- ot ! . was-concerne- 18-fo- co-oprati-ve . ; An I that stocked national booze cellar is one of nobody knows how to empty the unusual heritages of Uncle Sam under the prohibition law. The anemalous story of how in a land of drought, liquor obtained by confiscation has become a white elephant on the hands of the government, was told to the cabinet Friday by Attorney General Daugherty, arouled nowhere sing a discussion which except to a decision to investigate further. IT. CANT The attorney general told his colleagues and the president that large sums of much needed government funds, were being eaten up In storage house rentals and policing expense to keep liquor that the government did not want. An even greater economic waste would result from pouring the seized spirits Into the sewer and it was suggested that a way might be found to'extract the alcohol for commercial purposes or to turn the liquor The itself to some legitimate use. law says it is to be "confiscated." but does not say how to dispose of It. anotiii:h enforcement Another prohibition oo question that interested the cabinet arose from the seizure of liquor not intended for consumption in the UnitPAIR OF BLACK ed States, but merely in transit in GOGGLES NEW bond through this country. Cabinet asked whether there was not KILLING CLUE members some way to secure release of such shipments, but were told that nothing could be done until the courts From (Continued Page One.) had ruled on several cases of seizure pending. .Should the seizures be to talk to newspapermen and hurried now held legal, it is not impossible that to the office of the district attorney- the attorney general may ask con There he had a long talk with that of- gress to change the law. ficial. Both maintained strict silence oo about the reason for Fox's recall from Arizona and about what had transHOBOES ON TRAIN pired after his return. The district attorney, however, said BATTLE OFFICERS he had learned enough additional facts today to 16ad him to believe that the stock and firing mechanism of the EL, PASO, Aug. 13. Police, n shotgun found near Santa deputy sheriffsTex., and provost guards Monica, were portions of the gun that had been used in the Kennedy shoot- battled with a crowd of 75 illegal train ing. He declined to explain "why he riders about five miles from here Frithought so. day after the men had refused to get AUCTION HELD. off the train which was pulling into An auctioneer's hammer today the city. pounded out an end to the confidence of 1200 small investors placed in to Conductor Arigon Binkley attempted make the men leave the train. They Arthur Burch, now being held in Los refused after making threats, accordin connection with the slayAngeles, ing of J. B. Kennedy, as a business ing to reports received at police headman. quarters. Burch was and active The conductor dropped off the tralu manager of the Pa'hescope Company, at Lanark, N. M., a station not far the bankrupt firm. His father, the from and the chief diswired here, Rev. W. A. Burch, was chairman of the board of directors of the company. patcher. Sale of the office furniture belonging All available officers in El Paso to the concern took place this after- went In automobiles to meet the train. noon to satisfy an attachment of $474 Just before it pulled Into the city limdue to the owners of the building for its the illegal train riders saw the ofrent. ficers approaching, fled from the train, SMALL INVESTORS. In the tangled business venture hid under a trestle and into the hills, which Burch headed, were a numher some of them firing as the officers ap or women school teachers and steno- proached graphers. Many small Investors whn oo cover, the officers took up had bought stock in the company at theSeekfng fire. Fifty men were captured. HEAD OF BIG ten aoiiars a share, protested at the were two alleged army them sale of the office fixtures which they Among RUBBER FIRM deserters. declared were worth $7,000. Thes to seek n federal investi; The men were from the west coast DEAD, AGED 69 threatened gation of the concern's activities. to their statements to the according When the auction sale was ended police. the office which Burch occupied until (ContiMad from Page One.) oo he left hurriedly in answer to the plea of Mrs. was graduated in 1876. A brother, Madelynne Obenchaln, also INDUSTRIES SHOW in connection with the tragedy, United States Senator Le Baron B. held SOME IMPROVEMENT in disorder. The contents of his Colt, of Rhode Island, was a former was desk were a into nanklnoColonel .Tan dumped on Colt Federal judge. Miss Elizabeth b(?x- Aa the furniture was being cart- vary 12, 1881. married two NEW YORK, Aug. 53. Dun's says: B. Bullock. They have sons, Rus- ed avy. several of th at Business sentiment improves but acwept. a. worker One, In a C. coal G. and Colt Roswell sell Colt. The yard, broke as down he exhibited tual business is still backward. Readfirst named married Ethel Barrymore, for $250 of bonds which receipts he liberty said in a number of important the actress. had paid Burch for a bundle of justments : Colonel Colt suffered a nervous he basic departments have made further breakdown at his home in Bristol in stock. and this Is materially assistprogress ooJune last. On August 5 he suffered ed resistance to a furby Increasing shock. BRITAIN paralytic WILL SIJIELD of ther values, notably in the lowering oo woolen and silk goods diviTECHNICAL cotton, INDUSTRY CHANGES MADE IN sions, in which prices now are apparCOURT LONDON, Aug. 13. ently on a stable basis, and in hides (By the Associ- and leather, which have benefited by ated Press.) The government's safe- somewhat better demand from manu13. WASHINGTON, Manuel guarding industrials bill Friday was May Advices from New England '.Araullo, ranking associate justice of passed on third reading In the house facturers. a show further resumption of actiyity the supreme court of the Philippine of commons by a vote of 176 to 4. in shoe islands, has been selected by Presi- Former Premier manufacturing with . some Asquith opposed it plants operating at full capacity, and dent Harding to be chief Justice of as "a attempt to Intro- production in others increasing. In the court to succeed Victorino Mapa, duce a tariff without calling it one." resigned. a other centers industrial tendency to The bill provides for the levying of extend i'Norberto Romuladez, of the Philipand though is noted operations a customs' duty of 33 I S per cent ad pines, ofhas been selected to take the the as is natIs improvement slight", Associate Justice Arraullo on valorem on importations entering the Tlace at ural' the vacation peof the height t,he court, and Charles A. Jons, an United Kingdom of optical glass, opti- riod, the as regards prospects associate justice of the supreme court cal feeling instruments, scientific glassware, for fall and winter is decidedly more Oregon, has been chosen to fill the porcelain pf on instruments, magnetos, tung- confident- - Buying of iron and steel causcourt the Philippine vacancy ed by the resignation of Adam C. Car- sten and its products, synthetic and remains restricted, but some Inquiries son. organic chemicals, except dyestuffs, are received and the expectation is colors and color matter and fine chem- that the soon become railroads must icals and any articles not mentioned liberal purchasers. which the board of trade will have the Weekly bank clearings $5,377,431,-446- . power to specify, on the ground that the said articles are being sold or ofOOfered in the United Kingdom at prices Grover he's to .be Bergdoll below their production or owing to ex- married soon. Must says be something to change depreciation at prices below this report of a husband shortage in what they can profitably be produced Europe. Little Rock Arkansas for in Great Britain. ad-.dre- ss Ni:V YORK. Aug. IS. -- - wo-m- V candle that can be burned on every All Souls' Day for five 1 Illarnea IrerSOnS rjXempted was a matter for determlnutlon by th thousand years is being made oohere as a memorial to Enrico to $5,000 Caruso from the Inmates of an GROWERS PLAN OWN orphan home to which the Metstar contributed COMMISSION HOUSE ropolitan a opera WASHINGTON'. Aug. 13. Repeal for ear many years. 110,000 of the express tax of one cent on evrry It will be placed In the church of the Madonna of Pompert at CHICAGO. Auk. twenty cents of value was decided moa ns and livestock the Naples. Italy. a of commission', by ways upon today Antonio Aipllo. maker of the house at East St. Louis was announced: committee has erected a derrick in ramlle, The committee also voted tn levy a Friday as the first" tangible result of his shop by means of which the livestock candle is dipped thrice daily Into flat license tax of 110, on all retailers the study of le com. of soft drinks and to fix the manu- marketing by the American Farm Ru boiling tallow. .It will will wec"ks weigh and ten on fifteen.! in of at committee cereal tax reau federation's averaKes facturer pleted about one thousand pounds. Mr. 12 cents a gallon in place of the presThe committee in ppssion here, an ent manufacturers tax of fifteen per nounced that the Ajeilo has figured that the canhouse dle would burn continuously for Hale cent of the price. be opened immediately. thirteen years and seven months. WASHINGTON. Aug. 13. Practic- would wa men oi A live committee oo of the revision levy ally winding up 1912 tax law. house named to organize the commission sections of the ways and means committee Republi- house. They were John O. Brown. In- SCATTERED SHOWERS 1 cans voted Friday to increase from diana; E. S. Cunnlnfham. Iowa; C. Iv alIN WEEK PREDICTED J2.000 to 12.500 the Colllns, Colorado: J. E. Boot: Scott. ' i lowed married men having an 'I W. and II. Mumford, Illinois. net income of 16,000 or less. This- Texas, will "The company charge the regWASHINGTON. Aug. 13 -- Weather Janto be retroactive -- NY-.:, change . would anu wuum for livestock." commission ular selling iiredlctions for the week beginning in auuarv lazi. "But the said. Mumford Mr. in of the $200 increase earnings to Monday are: the dition L'DDer Mississippi, lower Missouri vom minn for each derndent of ilwtll h nroratpd back tn the nroduc h'.nt of a family previously decidcdLr. nn tho Main nf hudnp Hnn At valley. Rocky mountain and plateau r.rt' , nnnn. .,r,. regions: Generally fair except for ,o -u- u...-w l"um FC:Uterd TAXI Cl'T. ibowtn; moderate tempera company; turp Agreemlnt ia also reached, it wuslnt A Mocker and feeder also be established j pacific statea: Generally fair; nor to decrease the manufacturers' for fattening will " a as The most beautiful society girls in France, dressed in costumes said, to ma temperature, five three from peri subsidiary on tax candy manufacturer's tax on furs! of the allies, raised thousands of francs at a fete in Tuilleries gardens cent the . from 10 to 5 per cent, the tax on art for the families of disabled soldiers. 5 cent 10 and to to' per works from luxury lev-- I repeal all of the ies. Including those on carpets. rugB. JOPLIN CLUB PILOT traveling bags, pocketbooks. trunks, umbreilas. and portable lighting fix SUED FOR DIVORCE tures, as well as those on wearing apparel. Under preset plans of Republican JOPLIN. Mo.. Aug. 13. Mrs. Cora leaders, the committee draft of the Hamilton, wife of James A. (Jimmy completed bill, which will be In the SEASON to the 19ls Hamilton, manager of the JopIIn club form of an amendment a to confereno be will law presented and widely of of the Western league at 1 p. m. Monhouse Republicans known in minor league circles, yester- day and introduction in the house later filed suit for divorce In circuit that day. Actual consideration of it Authorities Dislike Throw- day court here. Hamilton is alleged to there, however. It was said, would go have an ungovernable temper and to over until Wednesday In order that th- Away and Do Not have ing passed tipcruelly bfaten his wife. Another measure could be formally and mean: on Tuesday by the ways woman also Is mentioned. Know What to Do ... f Mss DENVER. Colo.. Aug. 13. Nellie Phillips, 25 years old. aFriday promade a formal complaint to bation officer against George Stoffel. she was garage owner, charging that she had and that his "love mate" he borne him two! children and that to over them and turned took them his legal wire wno naa nu uniuini.. Miss Phillips charges, according to has court authorites, that Stoffel mantatned two residents- oneforfor four his years, one for her and wife. The young woman avers that by mutual agreement betweenhisherself wife and Stoffel's wife she and and half time Stoffel's have shared ' half. WIFE C03IPIAINS. Stoffel was placed under arrest following the filing of charges.has been A charge of It allegeschil-he placed against Stoffel. the two has not provided for dren of Miss Phillips. Stoffel's case first came to the attention of the authorties several weeks ago, it was said, when his wife came to the juvenile court and complaned about her husband's alleged relations with Miss Phillips. Mrs. Stoffel. the said, did npt juvenile court authorities her husband's alleged complain about Miss much Phillips, sowoman relations with other the about as she did having her own children so much of the time. CAN'T GIVE HIM UP. A divorce was advised by the court that authorities, it was said, in .order chilStoffel might be free to give the dren a name. Papers were drawn up, according to courtonattaches, and made the following day ready to file, but Mrs. Stoffel returned to the court and said she did not want a divorce as she could not give her husband up. The case came to the attention of the authorities they said, when Miss Phillips complained to the court that Stoffel "borrowed her children," last saying he wanted to "take Saturday them to their grandmother's on a ranch near Denver." Instead, according to the young woman'sto complaint, his wife." "Stoffel took the children Officers who nrrested Stoffel said they had difficulty in persuading his wife to surrender the chldren. Statements were issued by both following Stoffel's arrest. The statements were made verbally to the authorities and to local newspapers, Mrs. Stoffel said: BOTH GIVE REASONS. "I have always known about Miss I've hatPhillips and the children and The first time I ever saw ed her. was when she (Miss little bov the i a r it r a a rr i Yf m l Vitlllr-ioto take care brought hm to our home of during the night. I cannot describe my feelings as I looked at the child. I guess I've though too much of my husband all the time to say anything about it, but I've known that the day would come when it would be found out. Miss Phillips said: "I've been like a wife to George Stoffel. I've been absolutely true to him for four years and "he has paidj tne bins ana supporiea me. Airs. Stoffel wants the children; that Is the trouble, I think, but I can not see why I should give them up they are mine." non-suppo- ! tV Washington Officials Has- 'Love Mate1 Says Man Gave ten Preparations for Their Children to His : Disarmament Meet. Legal Wife Aug. Ifm SMALL IHCO; ilfAjthe ill ill f Orphans Provide Giant Candle as Caruso Memorial committee with the Democratic members prenent. "While the question of a apeclal rule is to be decided by the party confer ences, some leaaers saia iney expectea majority to adopt a rule limiting Keneral debate, fixing a time for a vote and giving priority to commit-IIImtee amendments. The regarded final action by the house a week from day. as something more than a prob- - BEAUTIES AID SOLDIERS' FAMILIES TAKES CUT ON TiGLE BARED kiUA.iU, SATURDAY EVENING, AUGUST 13, 1921. STANDARD-EXAMINE- R d nrasrssri -- , "Wasn't it luck happened to see it advertised. It was something I had been wanting for a long time and only by the merest chance I noticed where it was being sold." She only HAPPENED to see it advertised. And she considered herself lucky. But think how often she must have been unlucky how many good things she must have missed by not being a regular reader of advertisements. It will pay you to read the advertisements in this paper. to make a practice of reading them. Because: that I They carry the news of reliable stores in your town. They tell you where and how you can. buy to best advantage. They tell you of new and better things. They save your time and money and make your shopping easier. Read the advertisements REGULARLY |