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Show ri- THE OGDEN mm mi Naval Men Seek to Determine What Will Be: Condition of World Navies 1 When Holiday Period Ends I WASHINGTON. Nov. 22. (By the .Associated Press.) Naval experts of the three major powers still were reviewing today the highly technical questions connected with the American proposals for immediate fleet rer, duction and a naval holiday. The British and Japanese officers appear to have found some details of the plan which will require further treatment before final acceptance. The British have pointed out the effect on the fleets if the full measure of Secretary Hughes plan were carried into execution. The plan proposes cessation? of building for ten years. - Fixing of the life. of a battleship at 20 years, replacement building, to,' begin 17 years after the ship al-to be replaced was completed, this lowing three years for! construction of t nib "new ship. , life"ru!e alone is- - a Tfre 2 novel one, for other navies. Japan now uses 'eight years as the life of capital ships, beginning replacement within that period after a vessel 13 constructed. She has not as yet worked! out this eight-yecycle, however, expecting .iher present building pro- gran to attain it in 1928., Great Brit aiii has. no replacement schedule at present. For two years prior to the war she laid down five new battleships a year and for years previously ! ten-yea- i . . ish and Japanese experts think the United States would come to the end of the holiday period in far better thape than either of the other two powers. IIEAVLLY OS JAPAN". The situation apparently would weigh more heavily on Japan than on Great Britain because under tha ratio of Secretary Hughes' plan already, accepted by the British, the British would have to provide for a 20 per cent reduction of their fleet by 1931 when the ratio would apply. any such reJapan would not face must get to and duction, Tiowever. work promptly on new ships if she was to maintain even the proposed ratio." It seems possible that Secretary Hughes contemplated a still greater "j-5-- 3" " -3" 600.000-500,000-300,0- 00 ear : ar "5-5-- 3" 10-ye- ar . "two-power-standar- d" j " 10-ye- ar i " b; - , .20-ye- ar -- l)a-kot- aj i Puppy; tuMY Mc-Cleme- 1 ) , oooD-orei- YOu 9 Twenty-fift- , TO 3G puppv ti."D clod ptx voo ; Q: kTO ; 1 r1 ! newtf Suit or O'Coat and pay us a lit tie each 'werk or month iu you can spare the canh. Suits and O'Coatt, t2QJB5, r a t $34.85, J30.E5. bl WI CLOTHE Tin: rA3HLT t- - Street h T-- isG. CZ. BY HIS CHAUFFEUR i j ST. L.OU1S. Nov. 2". H. 11. Grabaro. a director of th Onhm I'arr company, wu hot nd killed by ht chauffeur. C. H. Taylor, In a cuffl?enwhich followed ihm chauffeur trance Into the Graham home with hU hat on. ttro VrNjrrv MAN" ArJ i ...-- i oo and wounding hU wlf lrtr-ln- - w, then threw th empty pUtol at hi trother. Ktrlklnt him on the head. Shelly ihn ran Into an adjoining room MEMPHIS. Tcnn.. Nov. 22. How. and cut hi throat with a raor, dy he wna beinc taken to a hoi-la- y nrd Hhelly. garage owner, late Mon-lln- c a a hU wife. at hot fired five hlAjpital. Shelly, police aay. became tcm-aoa brother and hit porarlly lnane. n. later-ln-la- 1 w. r KM fc i ctsrola most for yowc The , ' 'VOU If" t Nowadays, more than ever before, people are intent upon getting their money's-wortand it is at such times that the value of any commercial product is most accurately estab-h, - lishei CALL CAS of Dead Signed on V"1 f I 1 f " The Vlctrola is not only the standard of quality but the standard of value It is the product of the immense Victor factories where, because of wider experience and greater manu facturing skill, better goods can be made for less than the cost of inferior products and the public benefits. No matter which style Victrola you select it offers the greatest obtainable value at the pricewhether $25 or $1500, but look for the Victor trademark on the instrument you I 'I J ?! I I I i , ' " tit ' V ''- - 1 1 ' ' : 1 1aroUKo. 130, $350 Vlctrola No, 130. drctric, 3-4- 15 VUbovaar o Oak buy. l i FRUIT CAKE AND MINGE PIE , - INSANE MAN WOUNDS MEMBERS OF FAMILY to3ay. CHARGES DUPLICATION. The petitioners asked that the re- -' call, which resulted in the election of K. A. Nestos, as governor, Srelnbjorn Johnson, as attorney general, and J. A. Kltchln, as commissioner of agrl-- 1 culture and labor, be nullified on the, ground that there was not a sufficient number of valid signatures to the potitlons to obtain auch an election. An affidavit by "George Laird, head of the taxpayers" committee, said that It was escertained "that more than 6000 persons have sighed their names twice, on said petltiona and that If said names were not algned by the said persons same were forged," and that "more. than 10,000 persons have signed the, recall petitions, who- din not vote for governor at the general e'ection . in 1120." and that "more than 1000 persona have signed the 6ild petition who were not citizens of the state." DEAD PERSONS' NAMES. He further alleged that "one the tarn petitions appear the names oi many persons who had been dead for a long time prior to the time their to have signatures were been affixed." Hepurported alleged that "the ahow on their, fact original petitions that the names of as many as 20 persona have been algned by the same individual and la the same, hand- ANKS GIVING TMeM that tnc late-Monda- ir , ONE tAAN The BISMARCK, N. D.. Nov. 22 Mipieme court of North Dakota c n BUSINESS MAN SHOT I i ' M to- - E. Nelson in Charge under consideration the petition of five taxpayers for an order temporarily restraining the stAt canvassing board from canvassing the re-- , call election ballots Wednesday. Attorneys for the taxpayers seek-- , ing to nullify the election asked the court to hear them today but the court decided on an immediate hearing and after presentation of the case by 8. E. Pillsworth, permitted Ellsworth to file a citation of additional authorities - ! H 236 too.k ) I tn r r n xr chcwise a O N. O. OGDEN CO. Petitions, Nonpartisans Allege in Court , V L L FRAUD CHARGED el Come ia nt. der Ft Baldwin. The Denver & Rio Grande Railroad company also Is nem cd defendant; OXCE PROSPEROUS LINE. This action is the climax to efforts that stockholders have been making tor nine years towards having finances cf the company Investigated. In 1920 the stockholders committee was organized and the suit la the result of Its efforts. In its complaint the stockholders committee asserts that for many years he railroad carried on a prosperous business and from 1900 to 1910 paid The com preferred dividends inin full. 1915 the de Dlaint alleges that fendants entered into a conspiracy to wreck the D. & R. G. and to cause all its properties to be absorbed and wiped out try adverse Interests. As the first step, the complaint says the alleged conspirators, directors of both the Missouri Pacific and the Den ver & Rio Grande, caused the latter to default a mortgage Interest payment to the Western Pacific, although the road had funds to meet It. By this action and succeeding ones, the directors caused foreclosure proceedings to be Instituted against the Rio Grande, it adds. IMMENSE LOSS SIIOWX. In one protest sent to the directors the stockholders' committee wrote: "During the last few months di& rectors and officers of the Denver Rio Grande have been mute and immovable while a death blow was being dealt the company. They have supine- ly allowed properties of tremendous value, doubtless worth. $80,000,000. to be aold for $5,000,000 under a defective and unintelligible notice of sale, assets worth millions of dolvhereby lars were not revealed." Stock of the railroad was stricken from the New York stock exchange last August. Shortly before this, the stock was selling at less than $1 a share. The stock was removed from the exchange after notice was received rom the secretary of the road that the property had been transferred to the Western Pacific. The complainants ask that the defendants be required to make restitution for all moneys wrongfully divested and for all losses that the railroad and Its stockholders have inoo- - and O'coats We have opened a first class shoe repair shop in connection with the store of I'm Harry Mudge. James Horace Harding. H. Bonner, Charles C. Huitt. John Alvin W. Krech and Alexan ml at Ye 5, But not t Does' . "non-co-opera-w- 1 m l . . shoemaker nail on n half sole. Have them fixed right by proper sewing, then they will be like new. t , DONT RUIN YOUR SHOES OOKT PCT s NEW YORK. Nov. 22. Suit foritthe I which recovery of $200,000,000 the sustained by loss Is the alleged a & reDenver & Rio Grande railroadcombinaunlawful an sult of alleged n tion and conspiracy by men who serv-ntt directorate of the railroad last 10 years, waa started during the In the supreme court. Monday onsDiratora In Tti. mn nmm aa cwa made by th comnlaint-- which a committee of stockholders, are Gould. Edward T. Jeffery, George J. Arthur CoDDeil. Edwin Gould, Klnr- don Gould. Edgar L. Marston, Benjamin F. Bush. Edward L Brown, Ed ward D. Adams, Finley J. Shepard, Harrison Williams. Benjamin B. Me jMpin, George G. Haven. Henry L. sj Hi-Y- i I Hilly Sails Those high grade, hand turned shoes need attention of an expert. Don't let some 1 j II HCY, Assert Directors Conspired to , Ruin Properties Beaten-Stockholder- , - BY CONDO S' reduction in tonnage than the capital ships aggregates laid down in his replacement plan. He was stating the case for the United States with the possibility of an agreement'on.Far Eastern and Pacific, questions in the background. There seems little, reason to doubt that the American replacement program, to apply after the holiday, is largely tentative except in the xtio principle. It was expected by the American delegates without question test of the practical that a results of other agreements reached tour a year. This program is what as to the Far East would pave the way maintained her for still further naval reductions at now abandoned. the end of that time. I HOW THKY WILIi STAND. oo reAmerican Applying! the proposed replacement rule to the ships to' be tained "by each power under. the same TAKES SALESMEN program, Great Britain would have in NOT JUST CLERKS , 1031, at the end of the naval reIN THESE DAYS holiday when she might .begin four battleships placement building, that dated ;back 22. years to the time back ihefr keels jwere laid, four "going new(Continued from Page One) 21 i'ears and four 20 years. Her Wilest battleships,, the RoyaJ Sovereign of the Ogden Rotary-clulaid down in 1914 liam H. Reeder, Jr., president of groiip of five,, were and: completed in 1916 under war presthe Ogden Kiwanis club; Gus , would be 15 years from sure; They Wright, president of the Ogden date of ' completion and two years ; Progressive Business club; O. J. from the beginning of replacement Stilwell, secretary of the Ogden Vessels when the holiday ended, chamber of commerce; T. Ben .Of the four British battle cruisers Meldrum, of the Meldrum Adveri; to be retained, the Tiger was laid down service, and Darrell ,J. In 1911. She would be ready for re- '" tising Greenwell, managing editor "of Tlte Standard-Examine- r. placement also in 1931. The other oo three, the Hood, Renown and Repulse, were war built and designed for action in the. North, sea. RIOTING REPORTED EFFECT ONT .AMERICA.' ON PRINCE'S VISIT life rule and Applying the the holiday decade to the ships America. ibronosed1 to keen: iarht nf the 18 would be 20; years, or more from the , LONDON", Nov. 22. (By The Asso ress.j uwing 10 me ainerdate their keels were laid In 1931. Two;ciaiea ence in rime ana of them, the iDelaware and North teiegrapnic aeiays would be 24 years old from com- the dates of happenings in connection the Prince of Wales' tour of Inpletion before the ships to replace with are dia somewhat muddled. in the ad were newest! commissioned. them! The Ten- vices reaching here. shipa the Maryland, California, how-everi Official messages and some press nessee, Idaho and Mississippi, Would still have almost a decade dispatches represent everything as of active life' hen the holiday ended. quiet in Bombay on Monday. A ReuIn j the same Way the Japanesa. re- ters item form Bombay, however, says tained fleet, the oldest Japanese bat- that rioting was renewed there on curred. the Settsu, was laid down in Monday, two Parsee temples being tleship, U 11-- She would have but three years burned and others attacked. Some at active life left when the holiday shooting is said to have occurred but ended. Four other of her six battle-ehip- no casualties were reported. Quiet the Fuso, Yamashlro, Ise and was restored by night, the dispatch lligus, would have from four to five adds, and an orappeal by Mahatma the years to go before being scrapped as, Gandhi, leader out and replaced. The Nagato jtlonists" apparently having a pacifying alone would have ar decade or more of effect Eerviceable life left and the four bat It seems from these dispatches that tle cruisers, the Kirishlma, Haruna, the Prince of Wales visited Poona. in and Kongo, also would have Bombay province, on Sunday, returnorj five years before they ing on Monday, to Bombay, where he onlyfour wcuid be replaced. functions attended a number of ' Viewed In this way, there is some as guest of honor andpublic was received Names reason to, believe that both the Brit- - with enthusiasm. - . TUESDAY EVENING, NOVEMBER 22, 1921. R EVERETT TRUE SUE-TIRECie- OF RIO GRANDE ! STANDARD-EXAMINE- - - Order them from your grocer. Insist on American-Maiwhich 's insures you they are made in cleanest bakery and of the purest materials obtainable. d, Og-den- writing." .The election of October 28 to be nullified, resulted In the aought recall of Gov. Lynn J. Fraxler Attorney General William Lemke and John N. 1 lagan, commissioner of and labor, aupported by theagriculture Nonpartisan league. Og dsn aking Goo I J1 I) . ......i;v ; .1 . J; 'Uj' . t't . l . j J VlctroU No. 300, $250 A4bofT at Fna'Uh fcroa t I X-- i nji J? DO OPEN DEALING SPEEDS WORK OF CONFERENCE (Continued from Pace One) dertaking not to leaa territorial or literal to any jwwer; point 1. which tratlee regarding the Chiprohibits nese reg!6n without China becoming a 5. party treata thereto; point more apeciflcally with the which and political administrative Integrity of China, vis., extra territoriality, point . providing for the interpretation of Instruments granting special privilege In China in favor of the grantor: point t, providing for China's rights aa a nautral: point , which provides for peaceful settlement of international dlaputee in "HIS MASTERS VtXCE 1 Mtaatwxorf Ttli tridrtatrk axti th 1! trairtntriedl we r d "Vktro a id rc ti fy a ew r f rod Lock usder tbc lid I hock ca the Ubcll MCTCR TAUONO MACnnCE CO. 1 ; llVEN THE TUEKEY is proud of our tire vulcanizing, although his master eat him for Thanksgiv- may-soo- ing. Make it a real holiday for your car by placing on the wheels remade tires vulcanized by us in our own ex- pert jnanner. GEO. HUSSTIRE SERVICE CO. 2341 Hudson Ave. VlctroU IX, $75 the Pacific and the Far East; and point 10. providing- for future eon. aa a basis for iferencea of theofpower common policies in relation to the Far Eat. RCO. V ictor U.S. PAT. OFT laiiiiiio iv 1 O ' Camden,N. J. - 1 a t, i t. s. J. |