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Show Isst Gan Jki Pri&j Art In a Sdtc&rl II not please remember subscription wO help make this paper thing accessary strapg far an At Bring prices. Let us your next order lor (lire you want print Rkh County News 2 printing is synonymous i rata service. BEACHES ETEBT BOOK AXD COATES OF RICH COUNTY TWENTY-FIFT- UTAH NEWSREVIEW F POLICE BELIEVE The Bamberger IS BLUEBEARD OF GAMBAIS" 13 PLACER ON TRIAL; CHARGED WITH MANY MURDER8 Sase la None Too 8trong Against Arch Villian ' - NUMBER 19. RANDOLPH, RICH COUNTY, UTAH, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1921. YEAR. H d Accused of Luring Ten Fiancees To Villa Electric Railwaj TO U. S. FARMERS company Monday filed petition wltk the public utilities commission of Utal asking that tbe Utah Railway company and the Salt Lake & Utah Railroad company be required to put in joint STOCKMEN ALSO PARTICIPATE through rates on coal from points oa IN CREDITS EXTENDED BY the Utah Railway to Ogden. CORPORATION TWENTY.ONE MEMBERS, FOUR OF WHOM ARE WOMEN, NAMED TO ARMAMENT CONFERENCE Former Utah 8enator To Be Chain man of Advisory Board To United 8tatos Delegation In Arms Parley Word comes from Detroit Mich that Ray Law, the Satt Lake boy who mads Northwestern States Fare Well In national reputation for himself at Distribution of Vast Sum of Chow-Chothe health down of thi Money Given Out to Utah Public Health association, is addAid Farmers ing to his fame throughout the United States In the new foie of Humpty-DumptyWashington More than 822,600,000 health clown for the Nation, In credit has been extended fanners al Tuberculosis association. and stockmen during the two and one-naimonths since congress authorized President Gaarge Thomas of thi University of Utah left Thursday foi the war finance corporation to make New Orleans to attead tbe annual con advances for agricultural and liveventlon of the National Association ol stock purposes, according to figures State Universities. The meetings will announced Sunday. be held on Monday and Tuesday NoReports of the corporations activivember 7 and 8. The president will ties since August 24 showed a total be gene about ten days. credit In excess of 822,663,000, estlmad ted with about elghty-tw- o financial inHarry S. Anderson, president of thi in nineteen states for mala stitutions Salt Labe Ad Club, has been chosen a 'director qf the International Poster Ad. ing loans to farmers and stock ralserk States in which corporation advance! vertlseas association to represent thi western district, which Includes Colo- for these purposes have been made inrado, Wyoming, Montana, Idaho, Utah, clude: Montana, South Dakota, , Oklahoma and Texas. The district il Idaho, Nevada, Iowa, Nebraska allowed two directors, Mr. Hodson ol ind Wyoming. Oklahoma being chosen to servo with The eighty-tw- o advances range from Mr. Anderson. This Is the first yeal a few thousand dollars up to one ol that Utah has been honored In the set 115,000,000 to a cooperative association ections. in Minnesota, North and South Dakota, oo to assist in marketing grain. of manufacturers and tht Shippers Funds for the advances, official! Logan vicinity unanimously voted te said, are obtained from the corporaalign themselves with, other com- tions balance with the treasury, which mercial organizations of the statl at the time these operations were bewhich will represent Utah In than gun totaled about $430,000,000. fight against the carriers who propose Applications for agricultural and rate and to cut transcontinental leave those now in effect at Inter livestock loans are coming in steadily, it was stated. In addition to its domediate points untouched. mestic finaneng, officials said, the corFuneral services were held at Malal poration is continuing to financi Mrs. Margaret American products for export to forIdaho, Monday for eign markets. Davis, wife of Thomas A. Davis. Mrs Davis was bom In Willard In DecemKING ENTHRONED ber, 1853, being among tbe Qrst whit! children to bp bom in Boxeldey cou-tf- . Alexander Pledgee - Himself Before For many years Mr. and Mrs. Parliament and is Cheered Davis reside in Willard. Mrs. Davli Jugo-SlavAlexBelgrade, was the mother of ten children, six ol ander assumed the throneKing of JugoWhom survive her. slavia Sunday. He took the oath beJ fore parliament. Extraordinary pretho cautions had been taken to Qqe bunderd and nlaety-fiy- p guard the sand pesos, or 897,500 less the rati king. of exchange between the United State! Alexander rode to the parliament and Mexico, or 894,477.00, has bees building in an open automobile accomaccepted by Millard Haymore, acting panied by Premier Pacnitch and was for the Mormon colonists at Juarez sheered. ' Mexico, in the negotiations for th The king, who was attired in a gensale of land formerly owned by thi erals uniform, mounted the rostrum colonists and during the revolutloi and declared: Mexsince confiscated and occupied by I swear to maintain the national icans. unity and independence of the state the Integrity of its territory and tl cost the state during Octobei and govern according to the constitution 8233,149.56 more to run the governand the laws. 1 will always have bement than the amount received by thi fore me and in all my aspirations tha treasurer, according to the monthlj good of my people. report made public by State Treasup All members of the diplomatic corps, er Sutton. The report shows receipt! by H. Percival Dodge, Amerl. for the month of 8390,594.91, whlcl headed can minister to the kingdom and the with the balance on hand at the beSerbs, Croats and Slovenes, were presginning of the month, aggregated $L ent, together with deputies in the pic744,-4744.47. The expenses were 8013,' costumes of the country. and the balance on hand Octobei turesque , Versailles Court officials gathered here Monday for the opening In the e asslzeg of the trial Of Henri Desire Landru the "Bluebeard of Gambais, who is charged with eleven murders. Ten of his alleged victims were women, to whom he is said to have promised marriage, and the eleventh the son of one of them. He (s alleged to have burned his victims bodies. The trial of Henri Desire Landru, who has become known throughout France as "The Bluebeard of Gambais, on eleven counts of murder growing out of the disappearance of ten women to whom he had premised marriage, and the son of one of them, bids fair to rank among the celebrated criminal cases of France. ; Landru was arrested In April, 1919, and has spent his time fqj the past two and a half years in answering or evading questions of the police, the investigating magistrate, and other court officials as to the fate of his fiancees. He has proved a most stubborn as well as a very clever prisoner and the police admit that their case against rim Is not as strong as they should like it to be. The Bluebeard rented a small villa at Gambais, a few miles from Paris, and it Is there that the pdHce charge he did away with the women, all trace of whom has been absolutely lost. It is alleged that he advertised In various matrimonial agency papers and chose from the ters received 'those sighed by' women with a little property and no near relatives. A short courtship would follow, then a journey to the Gambais villa In the company of the fiancee. The accusation says thafXandru always returned alone. The police claim to have proof that women were seen to enter the villa, but none was heard of afterward. A few weeks later, whatever bonds, ' stocks, furniture, jewelry the women possessed would be sold. The villa and Gambais has been. learched, ransacked, practically demolished by the police In an effort to find the remains of the missing women. A few bones were found, some hair, but not enough to form a "corpus felicti. Babbit and mutton bones, lays .Landru. Why dont you bring your former fiancees forward? asks the Judge. How can I when yon keep me In Jail for years? counters Landru, if you and your hundreds of detectives cannot locate them, how can I? A dark vlsaged man, with shining bald head and long black whiskers Landru has become a familiar figure by Impersonations on the stage. He Is already under sentence of five years' Imprisonment for forgery growing out of one of the cases where murder Is also, charged. Seine-et-Ois- I LEG NEARLY TORN FROM BODY Fireman Suffers Severe Injun lee In Basement Fire Ogden The right leg of J. M. Whit-ton- , 37, a city fireman, was nearly tom from his body Monday morning when he became tangled in a coil of hose at a fire In the Fulton Drug companys street and basement at Twenty-fift- h Lincoln avenue. Whltton was hurried to the hospital, where It was said that his leg was severely fractured and the ligaments and muscles torn loose. His left leg was, also Injured. Whittons work is on the hose cart When the department answers a fire call it Is his duty to commence the anreeling of the hose and attach it to the fire plug. He had started this operation. Other men Were racing the nozzle to the blazing basement when the reel jammed. Whlttons right leg was within a twist of the hose and as the strain whipped the hose line taut the member was nearly wrenched from bis body. The fire was extinguished with nominal loss. Ogden Washington The advisory committee of the American delegation to the Armament conference as announced Tuesday at the White House consists of twenty-on- e members four of whom are women. One cabinet member, Herbert Hoov-r- , will be a member. Others included y General Pershing. Fletcher of the state department. Admiral W. D. Rogers, President Samuel Gompers of the American Federation of Labor, and Stephen G. Porter, chairman ef the house foreign affairs committee. ' Former Senator George Sutherland of Utah, a former president of the American Bar Association, and for years a dose personal friend of the president, will be chairman of the advisory committee. The other members are : Governor John M. Parker of Louisiana ; Assistant Secretaries Wainwrlght of the" war department and Roosevelt of the navy department ; William Boyce Thompson of New Tork; former Senator Willard Saulsbnry of Delaware; John L. Lewis, president of the United Mine Workers of America; Walter George Smith of Philadelphia; Carml A. Thompson of Ohio, former treasurer of the United States; Charles S. Bar-rat- t, president of the National Farmers union ; Harold M. Sewell of Main ; Mrs. Thomas G. Winter, president of the National Federation of Womens Clubs; Mrs. Charles Sumner Bird of Massachusetts ; Mrs. Catherine Phillips Edson of California and Mrs. Eleanor Franklin Egan of New York. f Under-Secretar- ' GERMAN RULER Art-zona- VERBAL BATTLE FOLLOW8 PRESENTATION OF LETTERS AND TELEGRAMS TO U. S. SENATE j 8enator Watson of Georgia Who Presented Original Charges of Army Hanging Placed On Invest!- -' police. " - ' V FoiWefRuier of Germany Will Never ESt on Throne Again, Is Be-of Many Gorman Citizens gating Committee Nef York Wilhelm of the house of Washington Letters and telegrams from persons offering to submit proof HoLensollern, now sawing wood at his cf charges that American soldiers exile home Haus Doom In Holland overseas were hanged without trial has, just as good a chance of going were presented In the senate Wednes- baqjLtfe Germany as kaiser as I have. deference in the two cases is that day by Senator Watson (Dem.) of Tb$ ' and dont want to, while Wll Georgia, whose presentation of the I original charges in the senate .several heir can't, but may want to. , W1U Scans ask- - the question, s ago resulted in appointment of a come back? perhaps more V" special committee of investigation. other about One of the telegrams. Senator WatBRAVERY The answer is an unequivocal G1RL3 LIFE son C08T8 said, was from a former major in many. the army and said he could assist in no, If words and deeds of the days are Attempts to 8ave Life of Companion substantiating the Another since the revolution in Germanywant charges. Who is Caught in Car doesnt criterion. any Germany from a resident of Philadelphia, ofFort Collins, Colo., Miss Effie fered to give two photographs similar Wilhelm back. Not even the men who Lighter of Fort Collins, Colo., 48 to that presented recently by Senator frankly strive for restoration of the years of age, was killed here Saturday Watson, as showing a gallows. The monarchical system in Germany want afternoon when a Colorado & Southern Philadelphian, whose name was not him to head It To the Socialists of Germany and train backed into an automobile from made public by the Georgia senator, are legion Kaiser Wilhelm Is a they which she had just leaped and threw said he saw one Meuse on the hanging the body of the automobile upon her, of a negro in uniform and could sup- quitter. He fled like a coward in the and crushing her to death. She had escap- ply positive proof of the hanging. nations darkest hour, they say, on his part or that of any attempt ed from the car at the approach of The correspondent did not say whether overzealous friends to restore him the train, but had rushed back to the hanging was after a court-martiwould be met with overwhelming op open the door of the tonnean of the or not. v position. automobile to permit her companion, In presenting his documents, SenaGermany proved what it thought of Mrs. David C. Thorelkeld, 70 years of tor Watson, with much show of feel- monarchists when it put a crimp in age, to escape. clashed with several senators and Herr Kapps private promonarchistic While trying to open the door of ing, was reminded by Vice President Cool-idg- e putsch last year ; and since that time the automobile the train struck it. that he should proceed In order the national feeling hasnt swung any Her head was severed from the body. and "observe senate rules. more In favor of return of a moarchy, Mrs. Thorelkeld sustained a sprained Mr. Watson said that a former Geor- The Erzberger demonstration, a dem ankle and her son, Thomas, driver of gia soldier was en route here to furn- onstration against reaction, showed the car, was uninjured. monThe automobile had stopped on the ish proof of the hanging charges, and that the junkers and the rabid old the restore who to his archists seek as him he that might appoint Colorado & Southern tracks to avoid and terorder assassination so the stand he that through by might being struck by a train approaching on parallel tracks of the Union senators side in the chamber to aid in rorism havent a chance. I would scarcely venture to assert Pacific railroad - fifty feet distant. proof. a constitutional monarch, such as that senate Senator had Watson then Apparently only Miss Lighter saw the would not one day come to Englands, Colorado & Southern train, which was clerks read a large number of letters, But at the moment the Germany. inand of direction clippings from newspaper telegrams the opposite backing consciousness of the people Is for a to tbe record, all reporting alleged the Union Pacific train. eight-hou- r day about cruelties to or mistreatment of soldiers. democracy. The the only fruit of the revolutlpn pleas ' Prince On Long Trip I would be glad to disbelieve these es the German worker, and he knows London The Prince of Wales left charges, said Mr. Watson. If proof if a monarchy returns he will exchange London Wednesday noon for Ports- is submitted that they are not true, It for an Industrial slavery of twelve mouth, where he will embark in the would be glad to know thoy are not to fourteen hours a day at low wages. Renown upon a 25,000-mil- e voyage to true. The men who want a monarchy India. King George and Queen Mary He then acfUed: back are, for tbe most part, disgruntaccompanied the heir to the British can show and I will show that led individuals, who have lost money I throne to Victoria station. officers bad men shot with no trial or position through the overturn. Rewhatever. leased officers curse the new regime, Message Heard In Japan But for the average man, the repub: and the shoving Facing Republicans Tokio President Hardings message lie is satisfactory. Its overturn might out his chin, Senator Watson said: from the radio corporations station in You make a fight on me if you can, perhaps come about through overLong Island for world circulation was if you dare. You said youd put my heavy tax burdens, for the promonreceived at the Iwaki station at 7 a. m. archists appeal to the Ignorant with head against a wall. Come en, do it Sunday, Tokio time. Senator Watson said-ththree mil- the plea that things were better the old days neglecting to point out ARBUCKLE CASE 13 CONTINUED lion privates of the war were enlisted with his side, and that negroes see- that a lost war with a staggering debt would and new economic, conditions would Manslaughter Charge Is Continued To ing the photograph he presented not make the common mans lot easiresent it. November Seventeenth even under a kaiser. er, who man Hereafter the Impugns San Francisco The trial of Roscoe The monarchists talk of the crown Mr. Watson, in con(Fatty) Arbuckle for manslaughter, my honor, said son as a possible throne canprinces not to answer will me, only growing out of the death of Miss Vir- clusion, others would have a Bavarian didate; ginia Rappe, was continued Monday here, but somewhere else. monarch. But the monarchists themSenator Edge (Rep.) of New Jersey selves until November 14 by consent of both with, of course some excepsides. The court announced that the read from a New Jersey newspaper tions say, Let the republic carry the trial positively would begin on the 14th. presented by Mr. Watson that the sol- hod, repair the country, and then let The trial had been set for Monday. diers whose execution was there pic- us In, say ten or twenty years, seek Arbuckles counsel said Armistice day tured tad been found guilty of attack- to restore a monarchy.' French girl, who had and a looal election made a weeks ing a continuance advisable, although he was died. Bryan Has Close Call ready to proceed Monday if necessary. Long Beach, Cal. William Jennings , Too Many Generals The district attorney said that as both Bryan Jr. narrowly escaped serious Insides had agreed on a continuance he Mexico City, Mex. There are al- jury here Tuesday when an automobile bad no witnesses on had. ready too many generals and colonels gas tank exploded. Bryan was seated Arbuckle was In court, accompanied In the Mexican army and for that rea- in a streetcar beside the automobile by his wife. There was no crowd pres- son President Obregon has refused to He escaped uninjured When the tank ent, but the Woman Vigilant commit- reinstate Into the federal army num- hurled fragments all around him. Mr. tee had representatives on hand, as in erous officers of the old army who and Mrs. Coblln, who were In the the preliminary hearing 'of the Ar- petitioned that they be given active machine, were lnjnred and were being buckle casft commands at their old grades. L ' treated at a local hospltaL t -- sec-rear- . Baridits Make Rich Haul Portland, Ore. Three masked men Monday help up and robbed the treasurer of the Liberty theatre, a motion picture house, two girl ushers and a man who were In the theatre, and escaped with between 87000 and 810,000 cash, the Saturday night and Sunday receipts, according to a report to the DO NOT MONARCHISTS WAV Jr WILHELM AT HEAD OF GENTRY, SCRIBE SAYS. JUGO-SLAVIA- la , 81 was 8979,216.37. Utah will pay her tribute to the ua known dead of the World war at thi ceremonies at the national capital and at tbe Arlington memorial, Novembei 9 to 11, by furnishing a wreath of appropriate size and design, to be placed on the bier of the dead soldier as 11 lies in state under the rotunda of tin main dome of the capitol. Governoi Mabey authorized the delegates from this state to the ceremonies to mak the necessary preparations Under the direction of B. B. Richard! of the biological survey of the United States department of agriculture an Intensive campaign to rid the state ol rats was launched thrdughaut Utal Monday. The fight against the rodent! is being conducted through the agencj of the schools cooperating with the cit les and towns. Prizes will be given thi schools succeeding In killing the larg est number of house rats during thi two weeks of the drive, and studenti will be awarded trophies for the best essays on means of exterminating tbl pests. C. R. Jones, corporations clerk li the office of H E. Crockett, seeretarj of state, reported Tuesday that dur Ing October a total of 818.045.25 had been collected from corporations doln; business In this state, as annual taxes Last year no such collections wen made during the month of Octobei but this year notices were sent oiil were prompt to reply, with the resull early, and several of the corporation! above named. Technically these taxei are due November 15. They becoml delinquent one month later, and ar i thereafter heavily penalized. BEEF REACHES PRE-WA- R PRICE8 Wholesalers Declare Meat as Cheap As It Was In 1914 The average wholesali Chicago price of carcass beef is back to tha level prevailing in 1914, according to figures made public Sunday in a review of the meat and livestock situation during October,, issued by the Institute of American Meat Packers. The average wholesale prices of carcass beef in 1914 approximated 12 cents, the report says, while at the end of October, 1921, it was between 11 and 12 cents. Some grades, however, are selling higher, while others ara selling lower, it is stated. A normal volume of production hai been maintained in the packing industry for the first nine months of 1921, as compared with the first nine months of 1913, says the statement. Total of all kinds of federal inspee ted meat animals for the first nine months of 1921 is given at 47,184,934, while for the same period in 1913 the number was 41,323,010. Government figures showing stocks--o- f meat in cold storage, indicate there was no heavy surplus left on hand as a result of the volume of production the report says. Canada To Fight Smugglers Regina, Sask. Plans for combating the smuggling of liquor into the Uni. ted States were taken up here Tuesday by representatives of the United States and four provinces bordering ' on the international boundary line. R Matthews of Washington is th representative of the United State! prohibition commissioner. O. ; |