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Show An Tra a First Class Job Printing ; At living prices. Let us have your next order for anything you want prints ed. Rich County News printing a synonymous with art md efficiency. TWENTY-THIR- RACE H not please remember wifi ubacriptioa this make paper Ip strong a thing necessary ior an unsurpassed news service. RANDOLPH, RICH YEAR. D IIS IT 1 COUfY, UTAH, SATURDAY NUMBER 7. JULY, 26, 1919 Conflicting Thoughts UTAH BUDGET 0 TO BE RESPECTED CAVALRY, POLICE AND PROVOST GUARD BATTLE WITH ANGRY MOB IN STREETS. DEFEATED NATION MUST PAY FOR AIDING BERLINS ATTEMPT TO THROTTLE WORLD. CARRANZA ASKED FOR EXPLANA-TIOOF ATTACK ON SAILORS City Detective Slain and Three Patrol men Hurt; Two Negroes Die From Wounds in Fighting. Three Complete Terms Demanded by Allies Handed to Delegation at Paris. Army Reduced to 30,000 on a Purely Voluntary Basis. Utah Senator, After Conferences With President, Declares Drastic Steps Are Considered. Flag Insulted Near Tampico. Paris. Austria's army is reduced to men on a purely voluntary basis by one of the military terms of peace, which, together with the reparation clauses and a number of minor terms, were handed to the Austrian delegates at Saint Germaine Sunday by M. Dut-astsecretary general of the peace conference, without ceremony. No definite reparational sum is fixed In the treaty, but Austria is told that the extent of her liabilities and the schedule of payments which will be extended over a period of thirty years will he made known before May 1, Washington. After several conferences- with the president and state department officials, Senator W. H. King The' known casualty Washington. toll of the race riots which broke out In various sections of the national capital Monday night, reached thre killed .and twelve seriously wounded, besides .numerous minor casualties. inflicted by bricks and other missies. In addition to the killing of one city detective and the fatal wounding of another by two negro women, three patrolmen had been wounded by negro rioters. Two negroes were dead and four others were reported to be dying. Harry" Wilson ,a detective, was shot by a negress, who had opened fire from the second floor of a residence. A second negress opened fire from the ground floor of a house across the alley, when the police and guardsmen rushed the house which the first was holding. Thompson, second detective victim, was wounded during the clash. Only one arrest was made, the young negress who was shot through the hips. It was said by officials that the riots here were of a more serious nature than anything which had occurred since the outbreaks during the period of the old feather duster legislature, in the turbulent days after .the civil war, before the present form of district government was organized. The outbreaks started Saturday iright, following a series of attacks on white women, several murders, scores of robberies and general lawlessness. Several hundred soldiers, bailors and marines joined together Saturday : to .search' for a negro" suspected of attacking the wife of an employee of the naval aviation bureau. Unable to find him, they made their way to the center of the city, where they vented their anger on a negro they met. B0, 000 a, 1920. The commission in charge of Germanys reparations will have an Austrian section. Austria now has the complete terms AMERICAN GENERAL HONORED and must submit her final observaBY CITY OF LONDON AT HIS, tions within fifteen days. TORIC GUILD HALL. The payment of a reasonable sum. an Austrian The establishment of commission. Sword is a Handsome Reproduction of ' The issuing of bonds. American Pattern President Asks The delivery of livestock and certain Permanent Rank for Pershing, historic and artistic data. March, Sims and Benson. Reduction of the Austrian army to 80,000 volunteers must be undertaken London. London honored General within three montns after signing of Pershing Friday with the freedom of r used-fothe peace. Thisarray cun be the city and a sword of honor in the no purpose other than maintenance of internal order and control of frontiers. presence of a distinguished company of Britons and Americans Importation and exportation of arms, within the historic Guildhall. gathered John W. ammunition and war materials of all the American Davis, the ambassador, kinds is forbidden by the treaty. The army reduction Is described as embassy staff. Rear Admiral Harry S. and his staff, members of the part of the plan to render possible Knapp British goyernmenL nd a numhen of the- initiation of u general limitation British generals were participants in of armaments of all nations. Austria is assured that the repara- the ceremony. Early this month the corporation of tions committee will "bear in mind the diminuation of Austrias resources and the city of London voted to present to leneral , Pershing and Marshal Foch capacity of payment resulting from the the freedom of the city and swords of treaty.. The allied and associated ' powers honor. The sword of honor is gold mounted recognize that Austria resources will and is a handsome reproduction of the not be adequate to make complete reOn the upper American army pattern. paration, but she undertakes by the band are displayed the arms of the treaty that she will make compensa- United States on one side and the arms tion 'for damage done to civilians and on the other. In of the of London city their property along lines similar to the enamel below the American coat of those of the treaty with Germany. arms is General Austria, by virtue of the treaty, ac- in diamonds and Pershings monogram rubies, with, the cepts the responsibility of Austria and American flag and Union Jack. On her allies for causing the loss and damthe reverse side enameled ribbons disage to which the allied and associated play the names of the battles in which have their nationals and governments the American troops participated and been subjected as a consequence of of General Pershings campaigns. the war imposed upon them by the The decoration of a Knight Grand aggression of Austria and her allies.- cross of the Order of the Bath, with which General Pershing has been pre5 IDAHOANS KILLED BY TRAIN sented, appears on the lower band. The hilt and bands are of gold. Interurban Crashes Into Auto Near The sword was made by the Goldsmiths & Silversmiths company. Nampa. Another Victim May Die. Boise, Idaho. Five persons were InStrikebreakers Disarmed by Mob. stantly killed and a sixth so badly injured that his life is despaired of Tulsa, Okla. Armed guards, motor-me- n when an interurban electric car ran and condustors on three interurinto an automobile Sunday evening at ban cars of the Oklahoma Union Rail6 :10 oclock at a railroad crossing four way company were removed from the a miles north of Nampa, on the cars and disarmed by an angry mob electric line. The, dead are of a thousand strikers and sympathizMr. and Mrs. J. F. Ullery of Nampa ers eight miles west of Tulsa on the and their daughters, Lina, aged 16, and Tulsa Sapulpa line Monday night. May, aged 12, and Mrs. Charles D. After they were disarmed the mob reShellaberger of Nampa. leased the strikebreakers. Mr. Shellaberger, badly injured, has The companys track was torn up been taken to the Nampa hospital and and telephone posts supporting the operated upon, but his condition is ex- trolley line cut down, but there was tremely critical. no damage done to the cars. The car operators went on strike several CAPT. PEARL HAMILTON weeks ago when the Oklahoma Union railway refused to recognize their union. -- J ugt Arthur IN WRECK ON U. P. E. Woods, Ogden and Evanston Men Slain as Engine Explodes. Thomas Carroll,, engineer; Charles R. Hobbs, brakeman, both of Evanston, Wyo., and Arthur E. Woods, fireman of Ogden, were instantly killed at 4 :15 oclock Monday morning at Curvo, sixty miles east of Ogden, when the boiler of locomotive No. 5008 exploded. Details 'of the accident are lacking. The superintendent of the Union Pacific system at Green River has started an investigation of the explosion. According to information received here, the locomotive was one of the powerful mogul type of the Union Pacific railroad, and was attached to a fast fruit train, eastbound, that left Ogden about two hours before the accident. Only the wheels were left on the track, the boiler and upper portions of the engine being scattered on each side of the right of way for many feet, it is stated. As all the men on the engine when the boiler exploded were - killed, the exact cause of the accident may never be known. Ogden. - Boise-Namp- . Bandits Rob Train; Throw Victims Off Lincoln, Neb. Pour armed robbers operating Monday night on a Chicago, Burlington1 & Quincy freight train between Sutton and Fairmont, Neb., robbed nearly fifty transient farm hands and threw a number of their victims from the train, said a report received by Bert Ely, a Burlington special agent here, from a railroad telegrapher at Fairmont. A number of the farm hands complained to the operator at Fairmont His report did not say if any of the farm hands were injured, nor did it approximate the amount of money re'. ported stolen. Honduras Acts to Crush Revolution. Declaring that there Washington. was a movement on foot to depose the government, the president of Honduras in council of ministers has issued a decree declaring the existence of a state of war, according to a dispatch received at the state department. The dispatch gave no details and Acting Secretary Phillips announced that the department had cabled for further information. internal demonstration. t Original Measure of $6,000,000. Vetoed by President Wilson on the Grounds of Not Being Sufficient Sum. Amended to provide instead of $6,000,000 for the rehabilitation of wounded soldiers, sailors and marines, the sundry civil appropriation bill, which was vetoed by the president, was passed by the house Thursday and sent to the senate. ,:rrhn original measure was vetoed by ilnf ground that the $6,000,000 was Insufficient to care properly for the countrys wounded men. To meet his objection, the house appropriations committee increased the amount to $12,000,000. Democrats insisted on a larger sum and, after Representative Buchanan, Democrat, of Texas, moved to recommit the bill with instructions to increase the amount to $18,000,000, Republican Leader Mondell offered a substitute to the motion, increasing the amount to $14,000,000. This was carried, 201 to 194. Urging congressional investigation of the coal situation, government officials and coal operators told the house rules committee that a fuel shortage was impending. Coal men fear the situation may get away from them, and that prices may rise $5 or $6 a ton, declared C. E. Lesher of the geological survey. Their advertising of the situation is in the hope that this may be averted, for they know that the condition would reflect on them. Anthracite production since January 1 was 10,600,000 tons less thwa fast year and bituminous 74,700,000 tins, Lesher said, due to lack of den and. Washington. $14,000,000 TWO KILLED, THREE HURT. road-crossin- - Housewives Want Action. Not Talk. Washington. Housewives are rather fed up with congressional Investigations of the high cost of living and would prefer enactment of remedial legislation, Miss Jessie Haver, legislative representative of the National Consumers league, wrote to Representative Tinkham of Massachusetts. Mr. Tinkham has introduced a bill appropriating $30,000 for a nation-wid- e inquiry jnto living costs. Planes Sought for Pleasure Trips Atlantic City, N. J. More than 2000 airplanes of the pleasure types could be sold immediately if manufacturers make deliveries and more than 5000 have been purchased or ordered in the United States in the last three 2000 ' j ' Traffic Delayed By Great Slides. Albuquerque, N. M. Washouts in eastern Arizoflna have delayed all transcontinental traffic on the Santa Fe. Train No. 10, due here from the west at 7 o'clock Sunday morning, was about sixteen hours late. Trains due tonight were reported from three to four hours late. - j of Utah Saturday stated that the Mexican situation is going to be dealt with In a manner that will fully protect the rights of Americans, both as to their lives and their property. Exactly what the new policy of the administration is to be, Senator King was not at liberty to disclose, but the inference was drawn from his remarks that as soon as the German treaty is ratified, or possibly sooner, strong demands will be made upon Carranza to guarantee full protection to Americans everywhere in Mexico, the demand to cover also American property rights in that country. ,. If a satisfactory assurance followed by satisfactory performance is not promptly forthcoming, it would seem to be the purpose of the administration to resort to military means of perCarranza that American suading rights can no longer be disregarded In his country. What form of military move would be resorted to in such event, is apparently not yet fully determined. The state department Is working on its reply to Senator Kings resolution calling for full information regarding past depredations against Americans and American property in Mexico, the report being delayed, it is explained, by the mass of data that is being assembled. The foreign relations committee is standing back of enatqr Kins? id his effoTt to get a full 'statement of Mexican outrages against Americans, (with a view to bringing about a speedy' and fair settlement of all American claims against the Mexican government. Electric Car Drags Automobile Along Tracks and Mangles Occupants. Ogden, Utah. Joseph Folkman, 50 years of age, and his son, Lee Folk-ma25 years of age, were instantly killed ; Josie Folkman, 15 years of age, a daughter, was prooabiy fatally inStewart, 12 jured, and Gwendolyn years of age, and Viola Knight, 15 years of age were seriously injured, Central electric when a Utah-Idah- o Interurban car crashed Into the Folk-ma- n automobile at the Harrisville road crossing, five miles north of here, at 4:55 oclock Saturday afternoon. The accident was one of the most frightful recorded in the annals of g accidents in this county in a number of months. The automobile in which the killed and injured were riding was dragged along the track fof- a distance of 250 feet before the electric car could be stopped. When the car was halted it was found necesMail Air Reduces Burleson Postage could Postmaster General sary to remove the pilot before it Washington. to the city. resume its trip the reduced postage Burleson Friday As a result of the collision, the senrate on airplane mail to 2 cents an first-clas- s Folkman was decapitated and disior for rate the ounce, regular and Lee Folkmans head emboweled, mail the air mail matter, and placed service on the same footing with all was crushed beyond all recognition, other means of railroad transporta- with the flesh and skin being tom from the face. Josie Folkman sustion. tained a fractured skull, broken legs GEN. JOSEPH PILSUDSKI and body injuries. It Is said she canStewart was not live. Gwendolyn hurt about the head and body. Viola Knight was injured about the legs. The marshal insists that armies. Great Britain should maintain large reserves of military material, saying: That is one of the obvious and precautions to be taken. Fruit Juice Taxes Ruinous. Washington. Federal taxes of- 10 per cent on the gross sales of grape, inapple and loganberry juices have so creased prices to consumers that the industry is threatened with destruction, the .house ways and means committee was told Monday by a delegation of Washington and Oregon congressmen and representatives of the industry. A tax of 2 cents a gallon or was urged, the spokesmen declarless, Capt. Pearl Hamilton, the adopted at present prices sales were that daughter of Commander Evangeline ing rapidly. decreasing Booth. t FOURTEEN FOR REMILLIONS HABILITATION OF FIGHTERS INCLUDED IN MEASURE. Foch Warns Britons to be Prepared The next time England London. will be in the same position as the last time she will not be ready and we will have to wait for her, is a statement made by Marshal Foch of France to a correspondent of the Daily Mail, which prints an interview with tlie commander in chief of the allied v More on Strike in Berlin. Berlin. Workers on the surface, elevated and subway car lines, and also electricians and gas workers, went on strike Monday in sympathy with the OF BATTLESHIP CHEYENNE. ' Killed. THREE DEAD Subscriber? New portrait of the president of months. Subject to prior right of the Mamand Us successors, the Gooseberry & Cottonwood Irrigation company is seeking to obtain rights to the waters of melting snows and late spring rains in the headwaters of the Uooseberry, and to convey the water across the backbone of the Wasatch, utilizing a tunnel, and to use the water as a supplementary supply to irrigate some 2700 acres around Fairview. County commissioners .accompanied by the committee representing clubs and organizations of Ogden and farmers of Weber county, protesting about the manner of repairing roads in the county presented to the state road commission a protest relative to the resurfacing of the ltiverdale Pleasant View and Ogden canyon sections of the state highway in Weber county. With more than three miles of trucks, rolling kitchens, mobile repair shops and touring cars in line, the transcontinental army motor convoy will reach Salt Labe August 15, according to the schedule of the trip. The convoy is being sent out by the government to determine the feasibility of long tours with trucks and to gather various data. Judge A. W. Agee of the district court at Ogden, granted the petition of Mrs. Bertha Hollands to claim compensation from the industrial commission of Utan on behalf of two minor children against the P. J. Moran Contractor, Inc., company. Her husband John Hollands, was injured while working for the company, December moth Reservoir company 16, 1917. The general crop condition in Utah is given as 97.2 per cent of the average, and during the month a gain was actually shown of 4.3 per cent, not- the unusually dry withstanding weather that prevailed and is still prevailing in most sections of the state, according to the weekly crop bulletin. h Formal complaint charging Joe with murder in the first degree was' filed at Tooele in the district com"!.- - The defendant, jvho has- been in jail, without bond, snice his arrest July 10, is accused of beating B. an Austrian cripple, to death with a milk can. s Required to work only time, Dr. E. G. Gowans, recently resigned as superintendent of public instruction, was last week appointed by the state board of education state health director at a salary of $3000 a year. This would he at the rate of $4000 a year for full time. About $1 per bruise was the rate of fine imposed by Judge Hugq B. Anderson of the juvenile court, at Salt Lake, upon Mrs. Goldie Gaoseid, when it developed that her little daughter, 4 years of age, carried black and blue marks from a beating at the mothers hands. A contest was filed in the Fourth district court at Provo, last week, against the incorporation of the town George of Orem on Provo bench. Adams, and others, are the contestants. It is their purpose to take about a mile off of the south side of the new townsite. Seventy-fiv- e per cent of the steers, 50 per cent of the stock cattle and 35 per cent of the sheep upon the Payette National forest will be sold or sent to winter ranges, according to the report received by District Forester L. F. Kneipp, of Ogden. Lieut. Eugene Merrill of Smithfield, who returned Saturday from France, was notified last week that he will receive the croix de guerre. He saw action as a member of the 347th machine gun battalion. Mrs. Anna K. Widtsoe, mother of John A. Didtsoe, president of the University of Utah, and of J. P. Osborn Widtsoe, head of the English department at that institution, died last week at her home, 310 Wall street, Salt Lake, after an Illness of several months. Michael Gionopolis, charged with murder in the first degree for the fatal shooting of Dr. M. B. Shipp on June 9, a Salt Lake, was bound over to stand trial In the Third district court at the condusioJ of preliminary hearing before City Judge Henry C. Lund. Crop conditions in Utah despite drouth are not seriously below normal. And there is no cause for alarm. Such arfe the encouraging statements made by James W. Jones, one of the best posted agriculturists in the intermountain country. 'The Kiekhefer Box company of Mil-- , waukee will build a box factory in Ogden immediately, according to the announcement made in that city by local canners who are said to have signed contracts for boxes of this fall'! production. One hundred and eight war prisoners arrived over the Oregon Short Line railroad last Saturday from Fort Fort Leavenworth, Kan., and immediately were taken to the prison camp lit Fort Dougins. Tam-lavic- - Pas-arvic- three-fourth- |